1. 159 Emergency medical services response time and paediatric mortality and morbidity in the Urban setting
- Author
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Ian E. Blanchard, Tania Embree, Gregory Vogelaar, Dirk A Chisholm, Don Voaklander, Christopher J. Doig, Alberto Nettel-Aguirre, Wadhah Almansoori, Amy B Couperthwaite, and Brent E Hagel
- Subjects
Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Emergency department ,Traumatic injury ,Relative risk ,Health care ,Emergency medicine ,medicine ,Emergency medical services ,business ,All cause mortality ,Paediatric patients ,Cause of death - Abstract
Background The standard response time benchmark for Emergency Medical Services (EMS) has been set at eight minutes or less for ground ambulances in many parts of the world. It has not been extensively studied, especially in paediatric patients who suffered a traumatic injury. As injury is the leading cause of death for those under the age of 18 it is important to determine if this benchmark for EMS response time may be a factor in paediatric mortality and morbidity outcomes. Methods All paediatric calls made to EMS between April 2010 to September 2013 in the cities of Calgary and Edmonton, Alberta, Canada were examined to select patients who had suffered a traumatic injury. These records were then linked to emergency department records and hospitalisation records using a deterministic linkage strategy using personal healthcare number, sex, and receiving facility. Patients were excluded if they were ≥18 years old, attended to outside of Calgary or Edmonton areas or suffered a medical complaint not related to an injury. Response time, the exposure, was defined as time of call to 9–1–1 to arrival of ambulance on scene. Response time was dichotomized into Results 42 620 patients were attended to between April 2010 and September 2013. Overall, 6778 patients were included in the study. 52 patients died and 628 patients were admitted to hospital. The adjusted mortality risk ratio given a response time of ≥8 minutes was 0.635 (95% CI: 0.346–1.166; p = 0.143). The adjusted hospital admission risk ratio given a response time of ≥8 minutes was 1.165 (95% CI: 0.985–1.379; p = 0.075). Conclusions A response time of ≥8 minutes was not associated with a difference in all cause mortality or hospital admission for paediatric patients suffering from a traumatic injury.
- Published
- 2016