47 results on '"Fishe JN"'
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2. Implementation and Equity Are the Keys for the Future of Artificial Intelligence in Emergency Medicine.
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Fishe JN
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- Humans, Artificial Intelligence trends, Emergency Medicine
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- 2024
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3. Combining Federated Machine Learning and Qualitative Methods to Investigate Novel Pediatric Asthma Subtypes: Protocol for a Mixed Methods Study.
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Xu J, Talankar S, Pan J, Harmon I, Wu Y, Fedele DA, Brailsford J, and Fishe JN
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- Humans, Child, Qualitative Research, Electronic Health Records, Adolescent, Child, Preschool, Female, Asthma, Machine Learning
- Abstract
Background: Pediatric asthma is a heterogeneous disease; however, current characterizations of its subtypes are limited. Machine learning (ML) methods are well-suited for identifying subtypes. In particular, deep neural networks can learn patient representations by leveraging longitudinal information captured in electronic health records (EHRs) while considering future outcomes. However, the traditional approach for subtype analysis requires large amounts of EHR data, which may contain protected health information causing potential concerns regarding patient privacy. Federated learning is the key technology to address privacy concerns while preserving the accuracy and performance of ML algorithms. Federated learning could enable multisite development and implementation of ML algorithms to facilitate the translation of artificial intelligence into clinical practice., Objective: The aim of this study is to develop a research protocol for implementation of federated ML across a large clinical research network to identify and discover pediatric asthma subtypes and their progression over time., Methods: This mixed methods study uses data and clinicians from the OneFlorida+ clinical research network, which is a large regional network covering linked and longitudinal patient-level real-world data (RWD) of over 20 million patients from Florida, Georgia, and Alabama in the United States. To characterize the subtypes, we will use OneFlorida+ data from 2011 to 2023 and develop a research-grade pediatric asthma computable phenotype and clinical natural language processing pipeline to identify pediatric patients with asthma aged 2-18 years. We will then apply federated learning to characterize pediatric asthma subtypes and their temporal progression. Using the Promoting Action on Research Implementation in Health Services framework, we will conduct focus groups with practicing pediatric asthma clinicians within the OneFlorida+ network to investigate the clinical utility of the subtypes. With a user-centered design, we will create prototypes to visualize the subtypes in the EHR to best assist with the clinical management of children with asthma., Results: OneFlorida+ data from 2011 to 2023 have been collected for 411,628 patients aged 2-18 years along with 11,156,148 clinical notes. We expect to complete the computable phenotyping within the first year of the project, followed by subtyping during the second and third years, and then will perform the focus groups and establish the user-centered design in the fourth and fifth years of the project., Conclusions: Pediatric asthma subtypes incorporating RWD from diverse populations could improve patient outcomes by moving the field closer to precision pediatric asthma care. Our privacy-preserving federated learning methodology and qualitative implementation work will address several challenges of applying ML to large, multicenter RWD data., International Registered Report Identifier (irrid): DERR1-10.2196/57981., (©Jie Xu, Sankalp Talankar, Jinqian Pan, Ira Harmon, Yonghui Wu, David A Fedele, Jennifer Brailsford, Jennifer Noel Fishe. Originally published in JMIR Research Protocols (https://www.researchprotocols.org), 08.07.2024.)
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- 2024
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4. Evaluation of the implementation of evidence-based pediatric asthma exacerbation treatments in a regional consortium of emergency medical Services Agencies.
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Fishe JN, Crisp AM, Riney L, Bertrand A, Burcham S, Hendry P, Semenova O, Blake KV, and Salloum RG
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- Humans, Child, Retrospective Studies, Female, Male, Child, Preschool, Ohio, Adolescent, Evidence-Based Medicine, Asthma drug therapy, Asthma therapy, Emergency Medical Services, Adrenal Cortex Hormones therapeutic use, Adrenal Cortex Hormones administration & dosage
- Abstract
Objective: Asthma exacerbations are a frequent reason for pediatric emergency medical services (EMS) encounters. The objective of this study was to examine the implementation of evidence-based treatments for pediatric asthma in a regional consortium of EMS agencies., Methods: This retrospective study applied the Reach, Effectiveness, Adoption, Implementation, and Maintenance (RE-AIM) implementation framework to data from an EMS agency consortium in the Cincinnati, Ohio region. The study analyzed one year before an oral systemic corticosteroid (OCS) option was added to the agencies' protocol, and five years after the protocol change. We constructed logistic regression models for the primary outcome of Reach , defined as the proportion of pediatric asthma patients who received a systemic corticosteroid. We modeled Maintenance ( Reach measured monthly over time) using time series models., Results: A total of 713 patients were included, 133 pre- and 580 post-protocol change. In terms of Reach , 3% ( n = 4) of eligible patients received a systemic corticosteroid pre-OCS versus 20% ( n = 116) post-OCS. Multivariable modeling of Reach revealed the study period, EMS transport time, months since implementation of OCS, and number of bronchodilators administered by EMS as significant covariates for the administration of a systemic corticosteroid. For Maintenance, it took approximately two years to reach maximal administration of systemic corticosteroids., Conclusions: Indicators of asthma severity and time since the protocol change were significantly associated with EMS administration of systemic corticosteroids to pediatric asthma patients. The two-year time for maximal Reach suggests further work is required to understand how to best implement evidence-based pediatric asthma treatments in EMS.
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- 2024
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5. Measuring the Implementation Preferences of Emergency Medical Services Clinicians Using Discrete Choice Experiments.
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Fishe JN, Smotherman C, Burcham S, Martin-Gill C, Richards CT, Powell JR, Panchal AR, and Salloum RG
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- Humans, Male, Adult, Female, Cross-Sectional Studies, Surveys and Questionnaires, Hospitals, Emergency Medical Services methods, Emergency Medical Technicians
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Introduction: Prehospital research and evidence-based guidelines (EBGs) have grown in recent decades, yet there is still a paucity of prehospital implementation research. While recent studies have revealed EMS agency leadership perspectives on implementation, the important perspectives and opinions of frontline EMS clinicians regarding implementation have yet to be explored in a systematic approach. The objective of this study was to measure the preferences of EMS clinicians for the process of EBG implementation and whether current agency practices align with those preferences., Methods: This study was a cross-sectional survey of National Registry of Emergency Medical Technicians registrants. Eligible participants were certified paramedics who were actively practicing EMS clinicians. The survey contained discrete choice experiments (DCEs) for three EBG implementation scenarios and questions about rank order preferences for various aspects of the implementation process. For the DCEs, we used multinomial logistic regression to analyze the implementation preference choices of EMS clinicians, and latent class analysis to classify respondents into groups by their preferences., Results: A total of 183 respondents completed the survey. Respondents had a median age of 39 years, were 74.9% male, 89.6% White, and 93.4% of non-Hispanic ethnicity. For all three DCE scenarios, respondents were significantly more likely to choose options with hospital feedback and individual-level feedback from EMS agencies. Respondents were significantly less likely to choose options with email/online only education, no feedback from hospitals, and no EMS agency feedback to clinicians. In general, respondents' preferences favored classroom-based training over in-person simulation. For all DCE questions, most respondents (66.2%-77.1%) preferred their survey DCE choice to their agency's current implementation practices. In the rank order preferences, most participants selected "knowledge of the underlying evidence behind the change" as the most important component of the process of implementation., Conclusions: In this study of EMS clinicians' implementation preferences using DCEs, respondents preferred in-person education, feedback on hospital outcomes, and feedback on their individual performance. However, current practice at EMS agencies rarely matched those expressed EMS clinician preferences. Collectively, these results present opportunities for improving EMS implementation from the EMS clinician perspective.
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- 2024
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6. Early Administration of Steroids in the Ambulance Setting: An Observational Design Trial (EASI-AS-ODT).
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Fishe JN, Garvan G, Bertrand A, Burcham S, Hendry P, Shah M, Kothari K, Ashby DW, Ostermeyer D, Riney L, Semenova O, Abo B, Abes B, Shimko N, Myers E, Frank M, Turner T, Kemp M, Landry K, Roland G, and Blake KV
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- Child, Humans, Adolescent, Ambulances, Adrenal Cortex Hormones therapeutic use, Steroids, Emergency Service, Hospital, Asthma drug therapy, Emergency Medical Services
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Background: In the emergency department (ED), prompt administration of systemic corticosteroids for pediatric asthma exacerbations decreases hospital admission rates. However, there is sparse evidence for whether earlier administration of systemic corticosteroids by emergency medical services (EMS) clinicians, prior to ED arrival, further improves pediatric asthma outcomes., Methods: Early Administration of Steroids in the Ambulance Setting: An Observational Design Trial is a multicenter, observational, nonrandomized stepped-wedge design study with seven participating EMS agencies who adopted an oral systemic corticosteroid (OCS) into their protocols for pediatric asthma treatment. Using univariate analyses and multivariable mixed-effects models, we compared hospital admission rates for pediatric asthma patients ages 2-18 years before and after the introduction of a prehospital OCS and for those who did and did not receive a systemic corticosteroid from EMS., Results: A total of 834 patients were included, 21% of whom received a systemic corticosteroid from EMS. EMS administration of systemic corticosteroids increased after the introduction of an OCS from 14.7% to 28.1% (p < 0.001). However, there was no significant difference between hospital admission rates and ED length of stay before and after the introduction of OCS or between patients who did and did not receive a systemic corticosteroid from EMS. Mixed-effects models revealed that age 14-18 years (coefficient -0.83, p = 0.002), EMS administration of magnesium (coefficient 1.22, p = 0.04), and initial EMS respiratory severity score (coefficient 0.40, p < 0.001) were significantly associated with hospital admission., Conclusions: In this multicenter study, the addition of an OCS into EMS agency protocols for pediatric asthma exacerbations significantly increased systemic corticosteroid administration but did not significantly decrease hospital admission rates. As overall EMS systemic corticosteroid administration rates were low, further work is required to understand optimal implementation of EMS protocol changes to better assess potential benefits to patients., (© 2023 Society for Academic Emergency Medicine.)
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- 2024
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7. Examination of disparities in prehospital encounters for pediatric asthma exacerbations.
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Riney L, Palmer S, Finlay E, Bertrand A, Burcham S, Hendry P, Shah M, Kothari K, Ashby DW, Ostermayer D, Semenova O, Abo BN, Abes B, Shimko N, Myers E, Frank M, Turner T, Kemp M, Landry K, Roland G, and Fishe JN
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Introduction: There are disparities in multiple aspects of pediatric asthma care; however, prehospital care disparities are largely undescribed. This study's objective was to examine racial and geographic disparities in emergency medical services (EMS) medication administration to pediatric patients with asthma., Methods: This is a substudy of the Early Administration of Steroids in the Ambulance Setting: An Observational Design Trial, which includes data from pediatric asthma patients ages 2-18 years. We examined rates of EMS administration of systemic corticosteroids and inhaled bronchodilators by patient race. We geocoded EMS scene addresses, characterized the locations' neighborhood-based conditions and resources relevant to children using the Child Opportunity Index (COI) 2.0, and analyzed associations between EMS scene address COI with medications administered by EMS., Results: A total of 765 patients had available racial data and 825 had scene addresses that were geocoded to a COI. EMS administered at least 1 bronchodilator to 84.7% ( n = 492) of non-White patients and 83.2% of White patients ( n = 153), P = 0.6. EMS administered a systemic corticosteroid to 19.4% ( n = 113) of non-White patients and 20.1% ( n = 37) of White patients, P = 0.8. There was a significant difference in bronchodilator administration between COI categories of low/very low versus moderate/high/very high (85.0%, n = 485 vs. 75.9%, n = 192, respectively, P = 0.003)., Conclusions: There were no racial differences in EMS administration of medications to pediatric asthma patients. However, there were significantly higher rates of EMS bronchodilator administration for encounters in low/very low COIs. That latter finding may reflect inequities in asthma exacerbation severity for patients living in disadvantaged areas., Competing Interests: No authors have conflicts of interest or financial disclosures., (© 2023 The Authors. Journal of the American College of Emergency Physicians Open published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American College of Emergency Physicians.)
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- 2023
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8. Pediatric and adult asthma clinical phenotypes: a real world, big data study based on acute exacerbations.
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Xu J, Bian J, and Fishe JN
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- Humans, Big Data, Phenotype, Adrenal Cortex Hormones therapeutic use, Asthma drug therapy, Asthma epidemiology, Asthma chemically induced, Anti-Asthmatic Agents therapeutic use
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Introduction: Asthma is a heterogeneous disease with a range of observable phenotypes. To date, the characterization of asthma phenotypes is mostly limited to allergic versus non-allergic disease. Therefore, the aim of this big data study was to computationally derive asthma subtypes from the OneFlorida Clinical Research Consortium., Methods: We obtained data from 2012-2020 from the OneFlorida Clinical Research Consortium. Longitudinal data for patients greater than two years of age who met inclusion criteria for an asthma exacerbation based on International Classification of Diseases codes. We used matrix factorization to extract information and K-means clustering to derive subtypes. The distributions of demographics, comorbidities, and medications were compared using Chi-square statistics., Results: A total of 39,807 pediatric patients and 23,883 adult patients met inclusion criteria. We identified five distinct pediatric subtypes and four distinct adult subtypes. Pediatric subtype P1 had the highest proportion of black patients, but the lowest use of inhaled corticosteroids and allergy medications. Subtype P2 had a predominance of patients with gastroesophageal reflux disease, whereas P3 had a predominance of patients with allergic disorders. Adult subtype A2 was the most severe and all patients were on biologic agents. Most of subtype A3 patients were not taking controller medications, whereas most patients (>90%) in subtypes A2 and A4 were taking corticosteroids and allergy medications., Conclusion: We found five distinct pediatric asthma subtypes and four distinct adult asthma subtypes. Future work should externally validate these subtypes and characterize response to treatment by subtype to better guide clinical treatment of asthma.
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- 2023
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9. Cancer incidence after asthma diagnosis: Evidence from a large clinical research network in the United States.
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Guo Y, Bian J, Chen Z, Fishe JN, Zhang D, Braithwaite D, George TJ, Shenkman EA, and Licht JD
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- Adult, Humans, United States epidemiology, Retrospective Studies, Incidence, Administration, Inhalation, Steroids, Asthma diagnosis, Asthma epidemiology, Asthma drug therapy, Neoplasms diagnosis, Neoplasms epidemiology
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Background: Prior studies on the association between asthma and cancer show inconsistent results. This study aimed to generate additional evidence on the association between asthma and cancer, both overall, and by cancer type, in the United States., Method: We conducted a retrospective cohort study using 2012-2020 electronic health records and claims data in the OneFlorida+ clinical research network. Our study population included a cohort of adult patients with asthma (n = 90,021) and a matching cohort of adult patients without asthma (n = 270,063). We built Cox proportional hazards models to examine the association between asthma diagnosis and subsequent cancer risk., Results: Our results showed that asthma patients were more likely to develop cancer compared to patients without asthma in multivariable analysis (hazard ratio [HR] = 1.36, 99% confidence interval [CI] = 1.29-1.44). Elevated cancer risk was observed in asthma patients without (HR = 1.60; 99% CI: 1.50-1.71) or with (HR = 1.11; 99% CI: 1.03-1.21) inhaled steroid use. However, in analyses of specific cancer types, cancer risk was elevated for nine of 13 cancers in asthma patients without inhaled steroid use but only for two of 13 cancers in asthma patients with inhaled steroid use, suggesting a protective effect of inhaled steroid use on cancer., Conclusion: This is the first study to report a positive association between asthma and overall cancer risk in the US population. More in-depth studies using real-word data are needed to further explore the causal mechanisms of asthma on cancer risk., (© 2023 The Authors. Cancer Medicine published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2023
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10. Pediatric Bradycardia Is Undertreated in the Prehospital Setting: A Retrospective Multi-Agency Analysis.
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Hanna A, Crowe RP, and Fishe JN
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- Child, Humans, Male, United States, Infant, Newborn, Infant, Child, Preschool, Adolescent, Female, Retrospective Studies, Bradycardia epidemiology, Bradycardia therapy, Atropine, Emergency Medical Services, Hypotension
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Background: Bradycardia is the most common terminal cardiac electrical activity in children, and early recognition and treatment is necessary to avoid cardiac arrest. Interventions such as oxygen, chest compressions, epinephrine, and atropine recommended by American Heart Association (AHA) Pediatric Advanced Life support (PALS) guidelines have been shown to improve outcomes (including higher survival rates) for inpatient pediatric patients with bradycardia. However, little is known about the epidemiology of pediatric prehospital bradycardia. We sought to investigate the incidence and management of pediatric bradycardia in the prehospital setting by emergency medical services (EMS)., Methods: This was a retrospective study of 911 scene response prehospital encounters for patients ages 0-18 years in 2019 from the United States ESO Research Data Collaborative. We defined age-based bradycardia per the 2015 AHA PALS guidelines. We performed general descriptive statistics and a univariate analysis examining any PALS-recommended interventions in the presence of altered mental status, hypotension for age, and a first heart rate less than 60., Results: Of 7,422,710 encounters in the 2019 ESO Data Collaborative, 1,209 patients met inclusion criteria. Most (58.5%) were male, and the median age was 2 years (interquartile range 0-13 years). One-quarter (24.7%) of patients received fluids, and bag-valve mask ventilation was the most common airway intervention (12.1% of patients). Receipt of any PALS-recommended interventions was associated with age-adjusted hypotension (odds ratio (OR) 4.0, 95% confidence interval (CI) 3.9-5.4) and altered mental status (OR 15.5, 95% CI 10.7-22.3), but not a first heart rate less than 60 bpm (OR 0.9, 95% CI 0.6-1.1)., Conclusions: To our knowledge, this study is the first to examine the incidence and management of prehospital pediatric bradycardia. Incidence was rare, but adherence to PALS guidelines was variable. Further research and education are needed to ensure proper prehospital treatment of pediatric bradycardia.
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- 2023
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11. Using Natural Language Processing to Examine Social Determinants of Health in Prehospital Pediatric Encounters and Associations with EMS Transport Decisions.
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Lowery B, D'Acunto S, Crowe RP, and Fishe JN
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- Humans, Child, Male, Infant, Newborn, Infant, Child, Preschool, Adolescent, Female, Retrospective Studies, Natural Language Processing, Delivery of Health Care, Social Determinants of Health, Emergency Medical Services
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Background: Social determinants of health (SDOH) influence access to health care and are associated with inequities in patient outcomes, yet few studies have explored SDOH among pediatric EMS patients. The objective of this study was to examine the presence of SDOH in EMS clinician free text notes and quantify the association of SDOH with EMS pediatric transport decisions., Methods: This was a retrospective analysis of primary 9-1-1 responses for patients ages 0-17 years from the 2019 ESO Data Collaborative research dataset. We excluded cardiac arrests and patients in law enforcement custody. Using natural language processing (NLP) we extracted the following SDOH categories: income insecurity, food insecurity, housing insecurity, insurance insecurity, poor social support, and child protective services. Univariate and multivariable associations between the presence of SDOH in EMS records and EMS transport decisions were assessed using logistic regression., Results: We analyzed 325,847 pediatric EMS encounters, of which 35% resulted in non-transport. The median age was 10 years and 52% were male. Slightly over half (53%) were White, 31% were Black, and 11% were Hispanic. Child protective services ( n = 2,620) and housing insecurity ( n = 1,136) were the most common SDOH categories found in the EMS free text narratives. In the multivariable model, child protective services involvement (odds ratio (OR)=2.04 [95% confidence interval (CI) 1.84-2.05]), housing insecurity (OR = 1.46 [95% CI 1.26-1.70]), insurance security (OR = 2.44 [95% CI 1.93-3.09]), and poor social support (OR = 10.48 [95% CI 1.42-77.29]) were associated with greater odds of EMS transport., Conclusions: SDOH documentation in the EMS narrative was rare among pediatric encounters; however, children with documented SDOH were more likely to be transported. Additional exploration of the root causes and outcomes associated with SDOH among children encountered by EMS are warranted.
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- 2023
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12. Prehospital Pediatric Asthma Care during COVID-19: Changes to EMS Treatment Protocols and Downstream Clinical Effects.
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Fishe JN, Heintz H, Owusu-Ansah S, Schmucker K, Riney LC, Semenova O, Garvan G, and Browne LR
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- Humans, Child, Male, Female, Retrospective Studies, Bronchodilator Agents therapeutic use, Pandemics, SARS-CoV-2, Clinical Protocols, Observational Studies as Topic, Multicenter Studies as Topic, Emergency Medical Services, COVID-19 therapy, Asthma drug therapy
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Introduction: During the COVID-19 pandemic, many emergency medical services (EMS) agencies modified treatment guidelines for clinical care and standard operating procedures. For the prehospital care of pediatric asthma exacerbations, modifications included changes to bronchodilator administration, systemic corticosteroid administration, and introduction of alternative medications. Since timely administration of bronchodilators and systemic corticosteroids has been shown to improve pediatric asthma clinical outcomes, we investigated the association of COVID-19 protocol modifications in the prehospital management of pediatric asthma on hospital admission rates and emergency department (ED) length-of-stay., Methods: This is a multicenter, retrospective, observational cohort study comparing prehospital pediatric asthma patients treated by EMS clinicians from four EMS systems before and after implementation of COVID-19 interim EMS protocol modifications. We included children ages 2-18 years who were treated and transported by ground EMS for respiratory-related prehospital primary complaints, and who also had asthma-related ED discharge diagnoses. Patient data and outcomes were compared from 12 months prior to and 12 months after the implementation of interim COVID-19 prehospital protocol modifications using univariate and multivariable statistics., Results: A total of 430 patients met inclusion criteria with a median age of 8 years. There was a slight male predominance (57.9%) and the majority of patients were African American (78.4%). There were twice as many patients treated prior to the COVID-19 protocol modifications ( N = 287) compared to after ( N = 143). There was a significant decrease in EMS bronchodilator administration from 76% to 59.4% of patients after COVID-19 protocol guidelines were implemented (p < 0.0001). Mixed effects models for hospital admission (to both pediatric inpatient units and pediatric intensive care units) as well as ED length-of-stay did not show any significant effect after the COVID-19 protocol change period (p = 0.18 and p = 0.55, respectively)., Conclusions: Despite a decrease in prehospital bronchodilator administration after COVID-19 changes to prehospital pediatric asthma management protocols, hospital admission rates and ED length-of-stay did not significantly increase. However, this finding is tempered by the marked decrease in study patients treated after COVID-19 prehospital protocol modifications. Given the potential for future waves of COVID-19 variants, further studies with larger patient populations are warranted.
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- 2023
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13. Identification of Factors Associated with Return of Spontaneous Circulation after Pediatric Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest Using Natural Language Processing.
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Harris M, Crowe RP, Anders J, D'Acunto S, Adelgais KM, and Fishe JN
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- Humans, Male, Child, Infant, Female, Retrospective Studies, Return of Spontaneous Circulation, Natural Language Processing, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation, Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest therapy, Emergency Medical Services
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Introduction: Prior studies examining prehospital characteristics related to return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) in pediatric out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) are limited to structured data. Natural language processing (NLP) could identify new factors from unstructured data using free-text narratives. The purpose of this study was to use NLP to examine EMS clinician free-text narratives for characteristics associated with prehospital ROSC in pediatric OHCA., Methods: This was a retrospective analysis of patients ages 0-17 with OHCA in 2019 from the ESO Data Collaborative. We performed an exploratory analysis of EMS narratives using NLP with an a priori token library. We then constructed biostatistical and machine learning models and compared their performance in predicting ROSC., Results: There were 1,726 included EMS encounters for pediatric OHCA; 60% were male patients, and the median age was 1 year (IQR 0-9). Most cardiac arrest events (61.3%) were unwitnessed, 87.3% were identified as having medical causes, and 5.9% had initial shockable rhythms. Prehospital ROSC was achieved in 23.1%. Words most positively correlated with ROSC were "ROSC" ( r = 0.42), "pulse" ( r = 0.29), "drowning" ( r = 0.13), and "PEA" ( r = 0.12). Words negatively correlated with ROSC included "asystole" ( r = -0.25), "lividity" ( r = -0.14), and "cold" ( r = -0.14). The terms "asystole," "pulse," "no breathing," "PEA," and "dry" had the greatest difference in frequency of appearance between encounters with and without ROSC ( p < 0.05). The best-performing model for predicting prehospital ROSC was logistic regression with random oversampling using free-text data only (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve 0.92)., Conclusions: EMS clinician free-text narratives reveal additional characteristics associated with prehospital ROSC in pediatric OHCA. Incorporating those terms into machine learning models of prehospital ROSC improves predictive ability. Therefore, NLP holds promise as a tool for use in predictive models with the goal to increase evidence-based management of pediatric OHCA.
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- 2023
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14. Implementing Oral Systemic Corticosteroids for Pediatric Asthma into EMS Treatment Guidelines: A Qualitative Study.
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McManus K, Cheetham A, Riney L, Brailsford J, and Fishe JN
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- Humans, Child, Adrenal Cortex Hormones therapeutic use, Qualitative Research, Focus Groups, Emergency Medical Services, Asthma drug therapy
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Introduction: Respiratory distress accounts for approximately 14% of all pediatric emergency medical services (EMS) encounters, with asthma being the most common diagnosis. In the emergency department (ED), early administration of systemic corticosteroids decreases hospital admission and speeds resolution of symptoms. For children treated by EMS, there is an opportunity for earlier corticosteroid administration. Most EMS agencies carry intravenous (IV) corticosteroids; yet given the challenges and low rates of EMS pediatric IV placement, oral corticosteroids (OCS) are a logical alternative. However, previous single-agency studies showed low adoption of OCS. Therefore, qualitative study of OCS implementation by EMS is warranted. Methods: This study's objective was to explore uptake and implementation of OCS for pediatric asthma treatment through semi-structured interviews and focus groups with EMS clinicians. We thematically coded and analyzed transcripts using the domains and constructs of the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR) to identify barriers and facilitators that most strongly influenced OCS implementation and adoption by EMS clinicians. Results: We conducted five focus groups with a total of ten EMS clinicians from four EMS systems: one urban region with multiple agencies that hosted two focus groups, one suburban agency, one rural agency, and a mixed rural/suburban agency. Of the 36 CFIR constructs, 31 were addressed in the interviews. Most constructs coded were in the CFIR domains of the inner setting and characteristics of individuals, indicating that EMS agency factors as well as EMS clinician characteristics were impactful for implementation. Barriers to OCS adoption included unfamiliarity and inexperience with pediatric patients and pediatric dosing, and lack of knowledge of the benefits of corticosteroids. Facilitators included friendly competition with colleagues, having a pediatric medical director, and feedback from receiving EDs on patient outcomes. Conclusion: This qualitative focus group study of OCS implementation by EMS clinicians for the treatment of pediatric asthma found many barriers and facilitators that mapped to the structure of EMS agencies and characteristics of individual EMS clinicians. To fully implement this evidence-based intervention for pediatric asthma, more education on the intervention is required, and EMS clinicians will benefit from further pediatric training.
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- 2023
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15. Understanding Health Care Administrators' Data and Information Needs for Decision Making during the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Qualitative Study at an Academic Health System.
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Guerrier C, McDonnell C, Magoc T, Fishe JN, and Harle CA
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Objective. The COVID-19 pandemic created an unprecedented strain on the health care system, and administrators had to make many critical decisions to respond appropriately. This study sought to understand how health care administrators used data and information for decision making during the first 6 mo of the COVID-19 pandemic. Materials and Methods. We conducted semistructured interviews with administrators across University of Florida (UF) Health. We performed an inductive thematic analysis of the transcripts. Results. Four themes emerged from the interviews: 1) common types of health systems or hospital operations data; 2) public health and other external data sources; 3) data interaction, integration, and exchange; and 4) novelty and evolution in data, information, or tools used over time. Participants illustrated the organizational, public health, and regional information they considered essential (e.g., hospital census, community positivity rate, etc.). Participants named specific challenges they faced due to data quality and timeliness. Participants elaborated on the necessity of data integration, validation, and coordination across different boundaries (e.g., different hospital systems in the same metro areas, public health agencies at the local, state, and federal level, etc.). Participants indicated that even within the first 6 mo of the COVID-19 pandemic, the data and tools used for making critical decisions changed. Discussion. While existing medical informatics infrastructure can facilitate decision making in pandemic response, data may not always be readily available in a usable format. Interoperable infrastructure and data standardization across multiple health systems would help provide more reliable and timely information for decision making. Conclusion. Our findings contribute to future discussions of improving data infrastructure and developing harmonized data standards needed to facilitate critical decisions at multiple health care system levels., Highlights: The study revealed common health systems or hospital operations data and information used in decision making during the first 6 mo of the COVID-19 pandemic.Participants described commonly used internal data sources, such as resource and financial reports and dashboards, and external data sources, such as federal, state, and local public health data.Participants described challenges including poor timeliness and limited local relevance of external data as well as poor integration of data sources within and across organizational boundaries.Results suggest the need for continued integration and standardization of health data to support health care administrative decision making during pandemics or other emergencies., Competing Interests: The authors declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. The authors disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: Financial support for this study was provided entirely by the University of Florida Clinical and Translational Science Institute, which is supported in part by the NIH National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences under award No. UL1TR001427. The funding agreement ensured the authors’ independence in designing the study, interpreting the data, writing, and publishing the report. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health., (© The Author(s) 2022.)
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- 2022
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16. Priorities for Prehospital Evidence-Based Guideline Development: A Modified Delphi Analysis.
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Richards CT, Fishe JN, Cash RE, Rivard MK, Brown KM, Martin-Gill C, and Panchal AR
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- Child, Consensus, Delphi Technique, Humans, Surveys and Questionnaires, Emergency Medical Services methods
- Abstract
Objective: Few areas of prehospital care are supported by evidence-based guidelines (EBGs). We aimed to identify gaps in clinical and operational prehospital EBGs to prioritize future EBG development and research funding. Methods: Using modified Delphi methodology, we sought consensus among experts in prehospital care and EBG development. Five rounds of surveys were administered between October 2019 and February 2020. Round 1 asked participants to list the top three gaps in prehospital clinical guidelines and top three gaps in operational guidelines that should be prioritized for guideline development and research funding. Based on responses, 3 reviewers performed thematic analysis to develop a list of prehospital EBG gaps, with participant feedback in Round 2. In Round 3, participants rated each gap's importance using a 5-point Likert scale, and participants' responses were averaged. In Round 4, participants rank-ordered 10 gaps with the highest mean scores identified in Round 3. In Round 5, participants indicated their agreement with sets of the highest ranked gaps. Results: Of 23 invited participants, 14 completed all 5 rounds. In Rounds 1 and 2, participants submitted 65 clinical and 58 operational gaps, and thematic analysis identified 23 unique clinical gaps and 28 unique operational gaps. The final prioritized list of clinical EBG gaps was: 1) airway management in adult and pediatric patients, 2) care of the pediatric patient, and 3) management of prehospital behavioral health emergencies, with 79% of participants agreeing. The final prioritized list of operational EBG gaps was: 1) define and measure the impact of EMS care on patient outcomes, 2) practitioner wellness, and 3) practitioner safety in the out-of-hospital environment, with 86% of participants agreeing. Conclusions: This modified Delphi study identifies gaps in prehospital EBGs that, if prioritized for development and research funding, would be expected to have the greatest impact on prehospital clinical care and operations.
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- 2022
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17. State emergency medical services guidance and protocol changes in response to the COVID-19 pandemic: A national investigation.
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Owusu-Ansah S, Harris M, Fishe JN, Adelgais K, Panchal A, Lyng JW, McCans K, Alter R, Perry A, Cercone A, Hendry P, and Cicero MX
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Objectives: The COVID-19 pandemic has had an impact on emergency medical services (EMS) and its guidelines, which aid in patient care. This study characterizes state and territory EMS office recommendations to EMS statewide operational and clinical guidelines and describes the mechanisms of distribution and implementation during the COVID-19 pandemic., Methods: A mixed-methods study was conducted in 2 phases. In phase 1, changes and development of COVID-19 guidance and protocols for EMS clinical management and operations were identified among 50 states, the District of Columbia, and 5 territories in publicly available online documents and information. In phase 2, structured interviews were conducted with state/territory EMS officials to confirm the protocol changes or guidance and assess dissemination and implementation strategies for COVID-19., Results: In phase 1, publicly available online documents for 52 states/territories regarding EMS protocols and COVID-19 guidance were identified and reviewed. Of 52 (33/52) states/territories, 33 had either formal protocol changes or specific guidance for the pandemic. In phase 2, 2 state and territory EMS officials were interviewed regarding their protocols or guidance for COVID-19 and the dissemination and implementation practices they used to reach EMS agencies (response rate = 65%). Of the 34 state/territory officials interviewed, 22 had publicly available online COVID-19 protocols or guidance. Of the 22 officials with online COVID-19 protocols, all reported providing operational direction, and 19 of 22 officials reported providing clinical direction., Conclusions: Most states provided guidance to EMS agencies and/or updated protocols in response to the COVID-19 pandemic., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflicts of interest., (© 2022 The Authors. JACEP Open published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American College of Emergency Physicians.)
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- 2022
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18. EMS Pediatric Transport Safety and Secondary Transport
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Fratta KA and Fishe JN
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Prehospital triage should match patient needs with hospital service availability. For emergency medical services (EMS), hospital destination choices are guided by patient condition, transport times, jurisdictional resources, local hospital capabilities, and patient/family preference. Evidence-based guidelines (EBG) have been developed to aid EMS destination choices for adult patients suffering from trauma, myocardial infarction, and stroke. However, analogous guidelines do not exist for any pediatric condition other than trauma. Regionalization of care has concentrated pediatric specialty/critical care services, magnifying the consequences of the destination decisions of EMS and increasing rates of interfacility transport (IFT) and secondary transport. Studies have identified several specific medical conditions that frequently necessitate secondary or interfacility transport. Additionally, preventable patient harms due to secondary and interfacility transport have been identified. To avoid such harms, and better serve the definitive care needs of the estimated 1.8 million children transported by EMS annually in the USA, EBG development should be explored for pediatric conditions beyond trauma., (Copyright © 2022, StatPearls Publishing LLC.)
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- 2022
19. EMS Pre-Hospital Evaluation and Treatment of Asthma in Children
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Fishe JN, Okorji O, and Blake K
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Asthma is the most common chronic childhood disease and a frequent reason for pediatric emergency medical treatment. This article will review emergency medical services' (EMS) prehospital assessment and management of acute pediatric asthma exacerbations., (Copyright © 2022, StatPearls Publishing LLC.)
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- 2022
20. A national survey of pediatric emergency medicine physicians on improving education in child maltreatment recognition and reporting child abuse & neglect.
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Mandadi AR, Dully K, Brailsford J, Wylie T, Morrissey TK, Hendry P, Gautam S, and Fishe JN
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- Child, Cross-Sectional Studies, Humans, Mandatory Reporting, Child Abuse prevention & control, Pediatric Emergency Medicine, Physicians
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Background: Child maltreatment is an important public health problem with serious consequences. Even in the face of increased research and enhanced public awareness over the last decade, the rate of child fatalities due to reported child maltreatment has increased., Objective: This study describes pediatric emergency medicine (PEM) physicians' knowledge, training, confidence, and barriers in recognition and reporting suspected child maltreatment., Participants and Setting: A nationally representative sample of PEM physician members of Pediatric Emergency Medicine Collaborative Research Committee (PEM CRC) participated., Methods: A cross-sectional 36-item survey study of PEM physicians with content domains including provider knowledge, preparedness, confidence, and barriers to identifying and reporting child maltreatment was conducted and distributed., Results: 113 of 486 members completed the survey. Confidence with recognizing and reporting child abuse (95%) was greater than in child neglect (88%). Knowledge in child maltreatment recognition and reporting was significantly correlated with confidence in reporting and recognition (p < 0.001). There was a significant relationship between knowledge and confidence for respondents from states with training in child maltreatment recognition and reporting requirement as a condition of licensure and re-licensure compared to states without the requirement (p < 0.01). Qualitative responses revealed insightful themes to improve child maltreatment training, recognition and reporting., Conclusion: Our national survey study demonstrates that PEM-trained physicians have high confidence and knowledge with the management of child maltreatment, and that inclusion of mandated child maltreatment training in residency/fellowship and mandated training for medical licensure in all states could improve child maltreatment recognition and reporting., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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21. A Statewide Study of the Epidemiology of Emergency Medical Services' Management of Pediatric Asthma.
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Fishe JN, Palmer E, Finlay E, Smotherman C, Gautam S, Hendry P, and Hendeles L
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- Adolescent, Albuterol, Child, Child, Preschool, Humans, Ipratropium therapeutic use, Magnesium Sulfate, Asthma drug therapy, Asthma epidemiology, Emergency Medical Services
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Objectives: Little is known about emergency medical services' (EMS') management of pediatric asthma. This study's objective was to describe the demographic, clinical, and geographic characteristics of current EMS' management of pediatric asthma in the state with the fourth-largest pediatric population., Methods: This was a retrospective observational study of EMS patients ages 2 to 18 years with an asthma exacerbation from 2011 to 2016. Patients from Florida's EMS Tracking and Reporting System were included if their EMS chief complaint indicated respiratory distress, if they received at least 1 albuterol treatment, and if they were transported to a hospital., Results: A total of 11,226 patients met the inclusion criteria. The median age was 9 years, and 49% were African-American. Geospatial analysis revealed 4 rural counties with disproportionate numbers of African-American patients. In addition to albuterol, 37% of patients received ipratropium bromide and 9% received systemic corticosteroids. Adjusted logistic regression revealed that the strongest predictors of receiving systemic corticosteroids from EMS were intravenous access (odds ratio, 33.4; 95% confidence interval, 24.4-45.6) and intravenous magnesium sulfate administration (odds ratio, 5.0; 95% confidence interval, 3.4-7.3), indicating a more severe presentation., Conclusions: This statewide study demonstrated low rates of EMS administration of ipratropium bromide and systemic corticosteroids, both evidence-based treatments for asthma exacerbations. Targeted EMS education should attempt to increase utilization of both those medications. In addition, the feasibility and efficacy of EMS administration of oral systemic corticosteroids for children should be explored., Competing Interests: Disclosure: The authors declare no conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2019 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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22. Implementation of a dual cervical spine and blunt cerebrovascular injury assessment pathway for pediatric trauma patients.
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Schonenberg Llach M, Fishe JN, and Yorkgitis BK
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- Cerebrovascular Trauma etiology, Child, Child, Preschool, Critical Pathways, Female, Humans, Male, Retrospective Studies, Spinal Injuries etiology, Tomography, X-Ray Computed adverse effects, Trauma Centers statistics & numerical data, Trauma Severity Indices, Wounds, Nonpenetrating complications, Cerebrovascular Trauma diagnostic imaging, Cervical Vertebrae diagnostic imaging, Spinal Injuries diagnostic imaging, Tomography, X-Ray Computed statistics & numerical data, Wounds, Nonpenetrating diagnostic imaging
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Background: Pediatric cervical spine (CSI) and blunt cerebrovascular injuries (BCVI) are challenging to evaluate as they are rare but carry high morbidity and mortality. CT scans are the traditional imaging modality to evaluate for CSI/BCVI, but involve radiation exposure and potential future increased risk of malignancy. Therefore, we present results from the implementation of a combined CSI/BCVI pediatric trauma clinical pathway to aid clinicians in their decision-making., Methods: We conducted a 2-year retrospective cohort study analyzing data pre and post implementation of the combined CSI/BCVI pathway. Data was obtained from a level 1 pediatric trauma center and included blunt trauma patients under the age of 14. We evaluated the use of cervical spine computed tomography (CT), CT angiography, and plain radiographs, as well as missed injuries and provider pathway adherence., Results: We included 358 patients: 209 pre-pathway and 149 post-pathway implementation. Patient mean age was 8.9 years and 61% were male (61% males). There were no significant differences in GCS, AIS, and ISS between pre and post pathway groups. Post pathway implementation saw reduced use of cervical spine CT, although this was not clinically significant (33% vs 31%, p = 0.74). However, cervical spine radiography use increased (9% vs 16%, p = 0.03), and there was also an increase in screening for BCVI injuries with higher use of CTA (5% vs 7%, p = 0.52). A total of 12 CSI and 3 BCVI were identified with no missed injuries. Provider adherence to the pathway was modest (54%). Conclusion Implementation of a combined CSI/BCVI clinical pathway for pediatric trauma patients increased screening radiography and did not miss any injuries. However, CT use did not significantly decrease and provider adherence was modest, supporting the need for further implementation analysis and larger studies to validate the pathway's sensitivity and specificity for CSI/BCVI., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest All authors (M.S.L., J.N.F., B.K.Y.) report no conflicts of interest to disclose., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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23. Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms (SNPs) in PRKG1 & SPATA13-AS1 are associated with bronchodilator response: a pilot study during acute asthma exacerbations in African American children.
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Fishe JN, Labilloy G, Higley R, Casey D, Ginn A, Baskovich B, and Blake KV
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- Adolescent, Black or African American genetics, Child, Child, Preschool, Cyclic GMP-Dependent Protein Kinase Type I, Humans, Pilot Projects, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide genetics, Asthma drug therapy, Asthma genetics, Bronchodilator Agents therapeutic use
- Abstract
Objective: Inhaled bronchodilators are the first-line treatment for asthma exacerbations, but individual bronchodilator response (BDR) varies by race and ethnicity. Studies have examined BDR's genetic underpinnings, but many did not include children or were not conducted during an asthma exacerbation. This pilot study tested single-nucleotide polymorphisms' (SNPs') association with pediatric African American BDR during an acute asthma exacerbation., Methods: This was a study of pediatric asthma patients in the age group 2-18 years treated in the emergency department for an asthma exacerbation. We measured BDR before and after inhaled bronchodilator treatments using both the Pediatric Asthma Severity Score (PASS) and asthma severity score. We collected genomic DNA and examined whether 21 candidate SNPs from a review of the literature were associated with BDR using crude odds ratios (OR) and adjusted analysis., Results: The final sample population was 53 children, with an average age of 7.2 years. The average initial PASS score (scale of ascending severity from 0 to 6) was 2.5. After adjusting for BMI, age category, gender and smoke exposure, rs912142 was associated with decreased odds of having low BDR (OR, 0.20; 95% confidence interval (CI), 0.02-0.92), and rs7081864 and rs7903366 were associated with decreased odds of having high BDR (OR, 0.097; 95% CI, 0.009-0.62)., Conclusions: We found three SNPs significantly associated with pediatric African American BDR that provide information regarding a child's potential response to emergency asthma exacerbation treatment. Once validated in larger studies, such information could guide pharmacogenomic evidence-based emergency asthma treatment to improve patient outcomes., (Copyright © 2021 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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24. Emergency Medical Services Clinicians' Pediatric Destination Decision-Making: A Qualitative Study.
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Fratta KA, Fishe JN, Schenk E, and Anders JF
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Objective This study sought to identify factors that influence emergency medical services (EMS) clinicians' destination decision-making for pediatric patients. We also sought EMS clinicians' opinions on potential systems improvements, such as protocol changes and the use of evidence-based transport guidelines. Methods Thirty-six in-depth phone interviews were conducted using a semi-structured format. We utilized a modified Grounded Theory approach to understand the complicated decision-making processes of EMS personnel. Memo writing was used throughout the data collection and analysis processes in order to identify emerging themes. The research team utilized hierarchical coding of interview transcripts to organize data into sub-categories for final analysis. Results EMS clinicians cited the perceived need for specialty care, the presence of a medical home, a desire for improved continuity of care, and the availability of aeromedical transport as factors that promoted transport to a pediatric specialty center. They voiced that children with emergent stabilization needs should be transported to the closest facility, however, they did not identify any specific medical conditions suitable for transport to non-specialty centers. EMS clinicians recommended improvements in pediatric-specific education, improved clarity of hospitals' pediatric capabilities, and the creation of a pediatric-specific destination decision-making tool. Conclusion This study describes specific factors that influence EMS clinicians' transport destination decision-making for pediatric patients. It also describes potential systems and educational improvements that may increase pediatric transport directly to definitive care. EMS clinicians are in support of specific designations for hospitals' pediatric capabilities and were in favor of the creation of a formal destination decision-making tool., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist., (Copyright © 2021, Fratta et al.)
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- 2021
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25. Improving EMS destination choice for pediatrics: Results of a novel pediatric destination decision tool pilot test.
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Fratta KA, Fishe JN, Anders PD, and Anders JF
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- Child, Decision Trees, Humans, Pilot Projects, Decision Support Techniques, Emergency Medical Services methods, Transportation of Patients methods
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Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest JA is employed by the Maryland Institute for EMS Systems, which oversees EMS operations in the state of Maryland.
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- 2021
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26. Creating a Pediatric Prehospital Destination Decision Tool Using a Modified Delphi Method.
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Anders JF, Fishe JN, Fratta KA, Katznelson JH, Levy MJ, Lichenstein R, Milin MG, Simpson JN, Walls TA, and Winger HL
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Decisions for patient transport by emergency medical services (EMS) are individualized; while established guidelines help direct adult patients to specialty hospitals, no such pediatric equivalents are in wide use. When children are transported to a hospital that cannot provide definitive care, care is delayed and may cause adverse events. Therefore, we created a novel evidence-based decision tool to support EMS destination choice. A multidisciplinary expert panel (EP) of stakeholders reviewed published literature. Four facility capability levels for pediatric care were defined. Using a modified Delphi method, the EP matched specific conditions to a facility pediatric-capability level in a draft tool. The literature review and EP recommendations identified seventeen pediatric medical conditions at risk for secondary transport. In the first voting round, two were rejected, nine met consensus for a specific facility capability level, and six did not reach consensus on the destination facility level. A second round reached consensus on a facility level for the six conditions as well as revision of one previously rejected condition. In the third round, the panel selected a visual display format. Finally, the panel unanimously approved the PDTree. Using a modified Delphi technique, we developed the PDTree EMS destination decision tool by incorporating existing evidence and the expertise of a multidisciplinary panel.
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- 2021
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27. Clinical, Operational, and Socioeconomic Analysis of EMS Bypass of the Closest Facility for Pediatric Asthma Patients.
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Finlay E, Palmer S, Abes B, Abo B, and Fishe JN
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- Adolescent, Child, Child, Preschool, Emergency Service, Hospital, Humans, Retrospective Studies, Socioeconomic Factors, Asthma epidemiology, Asthma therapy, Emergency Medical Services
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Introduction: Pediatric hospital care is becoming increasingly regionalized, with fewer facilities providing inpatient care for common conditions such as asthma. That trend has major implications for emergency medical services (EMS) medical care and operations because EMS historically transports patients to the closest facility. This study describes EMS transport patterns of pediatric asthma patients in greater depth, including an analysis of facility bypass rates and the association of bypass with demographics and clinical outcomes., Methods: This was a retrospective study of pediatric asthma patients ages 2-18 years transported by Lee County, FL EMS between March 1, 2018 - December 31, 2019. A priori, we defined bypass as greater than five minutes extra transport time. We performed geospatial analysis and mapping of EMS pediatric asthma encounters. We used the Pediatric Destination Tree (PDTree) project's tiered approach to characterize receiving hospital facility pediatric capability. We analyzed incidence and characteristics of bypass, and bypass and non-bypass patient characteristics including demographics, emergency department (ED) clinical outcomes, and socioeconomic disadvantage (SED)., Results: From the study period, there were a total of 262 encounters meeting inclusion criteria, 254 (96.9%) of which could be geocoded to EMS incident and destination locations. Most encounters (72.8%) bypassed at least one facility, and the average number of facilities bypassed per encounter was 1.52. For all 185 bypass encounters, there was a median additional travel time of 13.5 minutes (interquartile range 7.5 - 17.5). Using the PDTree's classification of pediatric capability of destination facilities, 172 of the 185 bypasses (93%) went to a Level I facility. Bypass incidence varied significantly by age, but not by minority status, asthma severity, or by the area deprivation index of the patient's home address. Overall, the highest concentrations of EMS incidents tended to occur in areas of greater SED. With regard to ED outcomes, ED length of stay did not vary between bypass and non-bypass patients (P = 0.54), and neither did hospitalization (P = 0.80)., Conclusion: We found high rates of bypass for pediatric EMS encounters for asthma exacerbations, and that bypass frequency was significantly higher in younger age groups. With national trends pointing toward increasing pediatric healthcare regionalization, bypass has significant implications for EMS operations.
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- 2021
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28. Pediatric Conditions Requiring Interfacility Transport From Emergency Departments: A Statewide Study of Regionalization.
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Aledhaim A, Fishe JN, Hirshon JM, and Anders JF
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- Child, Child, Preschool, Databases, Factual, Emergency Service, Hospital, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Retrospective Studies, Asthma, Emergency Medical Services
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Objectives: Pediatric care is increasingly regionalized, increasing rates of interfacility transport (IFT). However, it is unknown what conditions most frequently require IFT. This study's objective was to identify high-frequency pediatric conditions requiring IFT., Methods: This is a statewide retrospective observational study from 2010 to 2012 of pediatric patients (<18 years of age) who underwent IFT in Maryland. Patients were identified from the Health Care Utilization Project's database using probabilistic linkage. This study identified the 20 most common pediatric IFT conditions, and the conditions with the highest IFT rates., Results: Probabilistic linkage was successful for 2254 records. The largest age category was 0 to 4 years (43%). The top 3 IFT conditions were asthma (13.5%), epilepsy (8.5%), and diabetes mellitus (6.6%). Diabetes mellitus had the highest IFT rate (24%), followed by appendicitis (15.5%) and internal obstruction (14.4%)., Conclusions: Specific pediatric conditions commonly require IFT and had high IFT rates in this statewide study. In addition, the largest age group undergoing IFT was young children (0 to 4 years of age). This study provides specific detail regarding conditions and ages impacted by IFT, and emergency medical services should consider incorporating these findings into transport destination algorithms. In addition, public health stakeholders should address implications of the concentration of care for these common pediatric conditions and younger age groups., Competing Interests: Disclosure: The authors declare no conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2018 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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29. Authors response to reader's letter: Creating an evidence-based pathway for assessing and managing cervical spine and BCV injury in pediatric trauma population (Ref AJEM26745).
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Schonenberg Llach M, Fishe JN, and Yorkgitis BK
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- Child, Humans, Cervical Vertebrae diagnostic imaging, Cervical Vertebrae injuries, Wounds, Nonpenetrating
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Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest All authors (M.S.L., J.N.F., B.K.Y.) report no conflicts of interest to disclose.
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- 2021
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30. Out with the Old and in With the New: Deimplementation in Emergency Medicine.
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Fishe JN and Brailsford J
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- 2021
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31. Methods and implementation of a pediatric asthma pharmacogenomic study in the emergency department setting.
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Fishe JN, Higley RK, Casey D, Hogans L, Wylie TW, Hendry PL, Henson M, Bertrand A, and Blake KV
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- Adolescent, Asthma pathology, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Pilot Projects, Practice Guidelines as Topic standards, Prognosis, Surveys and Questionnaires, Asthma drug therapy, Asthma genetics, Delivery of Health Care standards, Emergency Service, Hospital standards, Health Plan Implementation methods, Pharmacogenomic Testing methods, Physicians standards
- Abstract
Objectives: The emergency department (ED) is a challenging setting to conduct pharmacogenomic studies and integrate that data into fast-paced and potentially life-saving treatment decisions. Therefore, our objective is to present the methods and feasibility of a pilot pharmacogenomic study set in the ED that measured pediatric bronchodilator response (BDR) during acute asthma exacerbations., Methods: This is an exploratory pilot study that collected buccal swabs for DNA and measured BDR during ED encounters for pediatric asthma exacerbations. We evaluated the study's feasibility with a qualitative analysis of ED provider surveys and quantitatively by the proportion of eligible patients enrolled., Results: We enrolled 59 out of 90 patients (65%) that were identified and considered eligible during a 5-month period (target enrollment 60 patients over 12 months). The median patient age was 7 years (interquartile range 4-9 years), 61% (N = 36) were male, and 92% (N = 54) were African American. Quality DNA collection was successful for all 59 patients. The ED provider survey response rate was 100%. Most ED providers reported that the study did not impact their workflow (98% of physicians, 88% of nurses, and 90% of respiratory therapists). ED providers did report difficulties with spirometry in the younger age group., Conclusions: Pharmacogenomic studies can be conducted in the ED setting, and enroll a younger patient population with a high proportion of minority participants. By disseminating this study's methods and feasibility analysis, we aim to increase interest in pharmacogenomic studies set in the ED and aimed toward future ED-based pharmacogenomic decision-making.
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- 2020
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32. Prodromal clinical, demographic, and socio-ecological correlates of asthma in adults: a 10-year statewide big data multi-domain analysis.
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Fishe JN, Bian J, Chen Z, Hu H, Min J, Modave F, and Prosperi M
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- Administrative Claims, Healthcare statistics & numerical data, Adult, Asthma epidemiology, Big Data, Case-Control Studies, Early Diagnosis, Female, Florida epidemiology, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Middle Aged, ROC Curve, Retrospective Studies, Risk Assessment methods, Risk Assessment statistics & numerical data, Risk Factors, Socioeconomic Factors, Asthma diagnosis, Machine Learning, Models, Biological
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Objectives: To identify prodromal correlates of asthma as compared to chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and allied-conditions (COPDAC) using a multi domain analysis of socio-ecological, clinical, and demographic domains. Methods: This is a retrospective case-risk-control study using data from Florida's statewide Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project (HCUP). Patients were grouped into three groups: asthma, COPDAC (without asthma), and neither asthma nor COPDAC. To identify socio-ecological, clinical, demographic, and clinical predictors of asthma and COPDAC, we used univariate analysis, feature ranking by bootstrapped information gain ratio, multivariable logistic regression with LogitBoost selection, decision trees, and random forests. Results: A total of 141,729 patients met inclusion criteria, of whom 56,052 were diagnosed with asthma, 85,677 with COPDAC, and 84,737 with neither asthma nor COPDAC. The multi-domain approach proved superior in distinguishing asthma versus COPDAC and non-asthma/non-COPDAC controls (area under the curve (AUROC) 84%). The best domain to distinguish asthma from COPDAC without controls was prior clinical diagnoses (AUROC 82%). Ranking variables from all the domains found the most important predictors for the asthma versus COPDAC and controls were primarily socio-ecological variables, while for asthma versus COPDAC without controls, demographic and clinical variables such as age, CCI, and prior clinical diagnoses, scored better. Conclusions: In this large statewide study using a machine learning approach, we found that a multi-domain approach with demographics, clinical, and socio-ecological variables best predicted an asthma diagnosis. Future work should focus on integrating machine learning-generated predictive models into clinical practice to improve early detection of those common respiratory diseases.
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- 2020
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33. Early administration of steroids in the ambulance setting: Protocol for a type I hybrid effectiveness-implementation trial with a stepped wedge design.
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Fishe JN, Hendry P, Brailsford J, Salloum RG, Vogel B, Finlay E, Palmer S, Datta S, Hendeles L, and Blake K
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- Child, Emergency Service, Hospital, Hospitalization, Humans, Ambulances, Emergency Medical Services, Steroids therapeutic use
- Abstract
Background: Pediatric asthma exacerbations are a frequent reason for emergency care. Early administration of oral systemic corticosteroids (OCS) in the emergency department (ED) decreases hospitalization rates and ED length-of-stay (LOS). However, it is unknown whether even earlier OCS administration by emergency medical services (EMS) in the prehospital setting further improves outcomes., Purpose: To describe the background and methods of a type 1 hybrid effectiveness-implementation trial of EMS-administered OCS for pediatric asthma patients incorporating a stepped wedge design and the RE-AIM framework., Methods: The study employs a non-randomized stepped wedge design where multiple EMS agencies adopt OCS as a treatment for pediatric asthma exacerbations at varying times. This design accommodates ethical considerations of studying pediatric subjects in the prehospital setting where informed consent is not feasible. We will compare hospitalization rates, ED LOS, and short-term healthcare costs between pediatric asthma patients who do and do not receive OCS from EMS. Using geographic information systems (GIS), we will measure how differences in outcomes scale with increasing EMS transport time. We will use the RE-AIM framework to guide a mixed methods analysis of barriers and enablers to EMS administration of OCS for pediatric asthma patients, including quantitative measures of adoption and uptake and qualitative EMS provider focus group data., Conclusion: This trial will determine if earlier EMS administration of OCS to pediatric asthma patients decreases hospitalizations, ED LOS, and short-term healthcare costs, and if those outcomes scale with longer EMS transport times. We will identify barriers and enablers to implementing EMS-administered OCS for pediatric asthma patients., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2020
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34. A Statewide Analysis of EMS' Pediatric Transport Destination Decisions.
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McManus K, Finlay E, Palmer S, Anders JF, Hendry P, and Fishe JN
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- Adolescent, Child, Child, Preschool, Databases, Factual, Florida, Health Facilities, Humans, Male, Retrospective Studies, Rural Population, Time Factors, Choice Behavior, Decision Making, Emergency Medical Services, Transportation of Patients
- Abstract
Introduction: Deciding where to transport a patient is a key decision made by emergency medical services (EMS), particularly for children because pediatric hospital resources are regionalized. Since evidence-based guidelines for pediatric transport destinations are being developed, the purpose of this study was to use a large statewide EMS database to describe current patterns of EMS providers' transport destination decisions for pediatric patients. Methods: This is a retrospective study of pediatric transports from 2011-2016 in EMS Tracking and Reporting System (EMSTARS), Florida's statewide EMS database. We included patients greater than 1 day and less than or equal to 18 years who were primary EMS scene transports. Our primary outcome variable was 'reason for choosing destination.' We performed descriptive and comparative analysis between closest facility and all other 'reason for choosing destination' choices. We used geospatial analysis to examine destination choice in urban and rural counties. Results: Our final study sample was 446,274, and 48.2% of patients had closest facility as their 'reason for choosing destination.' The next largest category was patient/family choice (154,035 patients, 35.7%). Closest facility patients were older (median age 12 versus 10 years, p < 0.0001) and had shorter median EMS transport times (11.3 versus 15 minutes, p < 0.0001) compared to all other destination decisions. Notably, 60% of respiratory distress patients' and 44% of seizure patients' reason for choosing destination was something other than closest facility. Geospatial analysis revealed that fewer rural patients were documented as closest facility compared to urban (43.9% versus 47%, p < 0.0001). Correspondingly, more rural patients' destination decision was patient/family choice than urban patients (36.3% versus 34.3%, p < 0.0001). Conclusions: This large, statewide study describes EMS' reason for choosing destination for pediatric patients. We found that just under half of patients were documented as closest facility, and over one-third as patient/family choice. Significant differences in destination reasons were noted for rural versus urban counties. This study can help those currently developing pediatric EMS destination guidelines by revealing a high proportion of patient/family choice and identifying conditions with high proportions of destination reasons other than closest facility.
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- 2020
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35. An evidence-based algorithm decreases computed tomography use in hemodynamically stable pediatric blunt abdominal trauma patients.
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Odia OA, Yorkgitis B, Gurien L, Hendry P, Crandall M, Skarupa D, and Fishe JN
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- Child, Child, Preschool, Cohort Studies, Evidence-Based Medicine, Female, Humans, Male, Retrospective Studies, Abdominal Injuries diagnostic imaging, Abdominal Injuries physiopathology, Algorithms, Hemodynamics, Procedures and Techniques Utilization statistics & numerical data, Tomography, X-Ray Computed statistics & numerical data, Wounds, Nonpenetrating diagnostic imaging, Wounds, Nonpenetrating physiopathology
- Abstract
Background: There are concerns about overuse of abdominopelvic-computed tomography (CTAP) in pediatric blunt abdominal trauma (BAT) given malignancy risks. This study evaluates how an evidence-based algorithm affected CTAP and hospital resource use for hemodynamically stable children with BAT., Materials and Methods: This is a retrospective cohort study of hemodynamically stable pediatric BAT patients one year before and after algorithm implementation. We included children less than or equal to 14 years of age treated in a Level I pediatric trauma center. We compared CTAP rates before and after algorithm implementation., Results: There were 65 in the pre- and 50 in the post-algorithm implementation group, and CTAPs decreased by 27% (p = 0.02). The unadjusted and adjusted odds ratio of receiving a CTAP after algorithm implementation were 0.3 (95% CI 0.1-0.6) and 0.2 (95% CI 0.1-0.7), respectively. There were no significant missed injuries in the post cohort. ED length of stay (LOS) decreased by 53 min (p = 0.03)., Conclusions: An evidence-based algorithm safely decreased CTAPs for pediatric BAT with no increase in hospital resource utilization., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest None., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
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36. Reply to: Comment on "Comparing the two-finger versus two-thumb technique for single person infant CPR: A systematic review and meta-analysis".
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Millin MG, Bogumil D, Fishe JN, and Burke RV
- Subjects
- Fingers, Heart Massage, Humans, Infant, Single Person, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation, Thumb
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- 2020
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37. Comparing the two-finger versus two-thumb technique for single person infant CPR: A systematic review and meta-analysis.
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Millin MG, Bogumil D, Fishe JN, and Burke RV
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- Cross-Over Studies, Humans, Infant, Manikins, Single Person, Thumb, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation, Heart Arrest therapy
- Abstract
Introduction: Current guidelines recommend that single person cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) on an infant should be performed with two-fingers just below the inter-mammillary line with the hand clenched, while two-person CPR should be performed with two-thumbs with the hands encircling the chest. Those recommendations are based on literature that demonstrates higher quality chest compressions with the two-thumb technique, with concerns that this technique may compromise ventilation parameters when performed by the single rescuer. The purpose of this study is to compare the two compression techniques' performance during CPR using both compression and ventilation parameters., Methods: We performed a systematic review and meta-analysis of literature identified through a search of PubMed and One-Search comparing the quality of chest compressions and ventilation parameters between the two-thumb and two-finger techniques (Prospero registration # CRD42018087672)., Results: We identified 20 manuscripts examining single person infant CPR that met study criteria, with 16 that included data suitable for meta-analysis. All of the studies included in the analysis were performed on a standardized manikin. Overall, the two-thumb technique resulted in a mean difference of 5.61 mm greater compression depth compared to the two-finger technique, with 36.91% more compressions of adequate depth per national guidelines. Interestingly, ventilation parameters did not differ between the two techniques., Conclusion: While recognizing that the results of this review may differ from actual clinical experience due to the lack of fidelity between manikins and actual human infants, this systematic review with meta-analysis demonstrates that when CPR is performed on a simulated infant manikin by a single rescuer, the two-thumb technique with hands encircling the chest improves chest compression quality and does not appear to compromise ventilation., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2020
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38. Pediatric Behavioral Health-Related EMS Encounters: A Statewide Analysis.
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Fishe JN and Lynch S
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Child, Preschool, Databases, Factual, Demography, Female, Florida, Humans, Male, Mental Disorders diagnosis, Retrospective Studies, Emergency Medical Services, Mental Disorders epidemiology, Mental Disorders therapy, Mental Health Services
- Abstract
Objectives: Pediatric behavioral health disorders and related emergency department visits are increasing, but effects on emergency medical services (EMS) are unknown. This study's objective was to describe the statewide epidemiology of pediatric behavioral health-related EMS encounters in Florida, including mental health and substance use. Methods: This analysis is a retrospective study of pediatric behavioral health-related EMS encounters from Florida's statewide EMS Tracking and Reporting Systems Database from 2011 to 2016. Demographic, clinical, EMS, and geographic characteristics are described. We also compared characteristics between patients who did and did not receive an acute EMS behavioral/psychiatric intervention. Results: There were 22,254 pediatric behavioral health-related EMS encounters during the study period, one-quarter of which were noted to have suspected or confirmed ingestion/substance use. The median age was 16 and the majority of patients were female and white. A total of 946 patients (4%) had an acute EMS behavioral/psychiatric intervention. EMS scene, ED turnaround, and total EMS time were significantly longer for intervention patients. Of the 14 counties in the top quartile of percentages of intervention patients, 7 were rural, 10 did not have any hospitals with child/adolescent psychiatric services, and 7 did not have any child psychiatrists. Conclusions: Pediatric behavioral-health related EMS encounters had a significant proportion of suspected ingestions/substance use, and we found disproportionate effects on rural agencies. Increases in EMS resource utilization (including longer EMS times) occurred in certain settings with limited behavioral health infrastructure. Those findings suggest an opportunity for community paramedicine to alleviate EMS utilization and decrease the frequency of pediatric behavioral health emergencies.
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- 2019
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39. Emergency Medical Services Bypass of the Closest Facility for Pediatric Patients.
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Fishe JN, Psoter KJ, and Anders JF
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- Adolescent, Age Factors, Child, Child, Preschool, Decision Making, Female, Humans, Infant, Male, Retrospective Studies, Emergency Medical Services, Transportation of Patients, Trauma Centers
- Abstract
Objectives : Pediatric specialty care is increasingly regionalized. It is unknown how regionalization affects emergency medical services (EMS) providers' destination decisions for non-trauma pediatric patients. We sought to characterize the rates of bypass of the closest facility, and destination facilities' levels of pediatric care in three diverse EMS agencies. Methods : This is a one-year retrospective study of non-trauma pediatric patients less than 18 years of age transported by three EMS agencies (Baltimore City, Prince George's County, and Queen Anne's County) in 2016. A priori , a bypass was defined as transport to a facility more than 2 km farther than the distance to the closest facility. We calculated rates of bypass and categorized destination and closest facilities by their pediatric service availability using publicly available information. EMS transport distance and time were also compared for bypass and closest facility patients. Results : The three EMS agencies in 2016 transported a total of 12,258 non-trauma pediatric patients, of whom 11,945 (97%) were successfully geocoded. Overall 43% (n = 5,087) of patients bypassed the nearest facility, of which 87% (n = 4,439) were transported to a facility with higher-level pediatric care than the closest facility. Both bypass rates and destination facility pediatric levels differed between agencies. Bypasses had significantly longer transport times and distances as compared to closest facility transports (p < 0.001). For non-trauma pediatric bypasses alone, an additional 41,494 kilometers traveled, and 979 hours of EMS transport time was attributable to bypassing the closest facility. Conclusions : This study reveals a high rate of pediatric bypass for non-trauma patients in three diverse EMS agencies. Bypass results in increased EMS resource utilization through longer transport time and distance. For non-trauma pediatric patients for whom there is little destination guidance, further work is required to determine bypass' effects on patient outcomes.
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- 2019
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40. Emergency Medical Services Administration of Systemic Corticosteroids for Pediatric Asthma: A Statewide Study of Emergency Department Outcomes.
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Fishe JN, Gautam S, Hendry P, Blake KV, and Hendeles L
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- 2019
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41. Introduction of a New EMS Protocol Using the Communities of Practice Educational Model.
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Fratta KA, Fishe JN, Anders JF, and Smith TG
- Abstract
Emergency Medical Services (EMS) protocol implementation can be a challenging endeavor given the large and diverse provider workforce. These efforts can be even more challenging given training restrictions, career and volunteer combination EMS agencies, and inconsistent work schedules. In an effort to educate as many providers as possible in a relatively short time, the community of practice educational model was used during a new evidence-based EMS protocol implementation. This model identifies providers who are enthusiastic during initial training as advocates. These advocates then continue to educate their peers going forward. This allows for the initial educational effort to continue to propagate during pilot testing and beyond. During this protocol implementation, a total of 17 educational visits were made to EMS stations and 43 providers were identified as advocates.FrattaKA, FisheJN, AndersJF, SmithTG. Introduction of a new EMS protocol using the communities of practice educational model. Prehosp Disaster Med. 2019;34(1):108-109.
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- 2019
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42. Implementing Prehospital Evidence-Based Guidelines: A Systematic Literature Review.
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Fishe JN, Crowe RP, Cash RE, Nudell NG, Martin-Gill C, and Richards CT
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- Cross-Sectional Studies, Humans, Retrospective Studies, Diffusion of Innovation, Emergency Medical Services methods, Evidence-Based Medicine
- Abstract
Objective: As prehospital research advances, more evidence-based guidelines (EBGs) are implemented into emergency medical services (EMS) practice. However, incomplete or suboptimal prehospital EBG implementation may hinder improvement in patient outcomes. To inform future efforts, this study's objective was to review existing evidence pertaining to prehospital EBG implementation methods., Methods: This study was a systematic literature review and evaluation following the Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development, and Evaluation (GRADE) methodology. PubMed, EMBASE, Scopus, and Google Advanced Search were searched without language or publication date filters for articles addressing prehospital EBG implementation. Conference proceedings, textbooks, and non-English articles were excluded. GRADE was applied to the remaining articles independently by three of five study investigators. Study characteristics and salient findings from the included articles are reported., Results: The systematic literature review identified 1,367 articles, with 41 meeting inclusion criteria. Most articles described prehospital EBG implementation (n = 24, 59%), or implementation barriers (n = 13, 32%). Common study designs were statement documents (n = 12, 29%), retrospective cohort studies (n = 12, 29%), and cross-sectional studies (n = 9, 22%). Using GRADE, evidence quality was rated low (n = 18, 44%), or very low (n = 23, 56%). Salient findings from the articles included: (i) EBG adherence and patient outcomes depend upon successful implementation, (ii) published studies generally lack detailed implementation methods, (iii) EBG implementation takes longer than planned (mostly for EMS education), (iv) EMS systems' heterogeneity affects EBG implementation, and (v) multiple barriers limit successful implementation (e.g., financial constraints, equipment purchasing, coordination with hospitals, and regulatory agencies). This review found no direct evidence for best prehospital EBG implementation practices. There were no studies comparing implementation methods or implementation in different prehospital settings (e.g., urban vs. rural, advanced vs. basic life support)., Conclusions: While prehospital EBG implementation barriers are well described, there is a paucity of evidence for optimal implementation methods. For scientific advances to reach prehospital patients, EBG development efforts must translate into EMS practice. Future research should consider comparing implementation methodologies in different prehospital settings, with a goal of defining detailed, reproducible best practices.
- Published
- 2018
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43. Retrospective Evaluation of Risk Factors for Pediatric Secondary Transport.
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Fishe JN, Psoter KJ, Klein BL, and Anders JF
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Child, Preschool, Databases, Factual, Emergency Medical Services methods, Emergency Service, Hospital statistics & numerical data, Female, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Male, Maryland, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, Time-to-Treatment statistics & numerical data, Trauma Centers statistics & numerical data, Emergencies epidemiology, Emergency Medical Services statistics & numerical data, Transportation of Patients statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Objective: Emergency medical services (EMS) typically transports patients to the nearest emergency department (ED). After initial presentation, children who require specialized care must undergo secondary transport, exposing them to additional risks and delaying definitive treatment. EMS direct transport protocols exist for major trauma and certain adult medical conditions, however the same cannot be said for pediatric medical conditions or injuries that do not meet trauma center criteria ('minor trauma'). To explore the utility of such future protocols, we sought to first describe the pediatric secondary transport population and examine prehospital risk factors for secondary transport., Methods: Pediatric secondary transport patients aged 0-18 years were identified. Patients meeting state EMS trauma protocol criteria or who were clinically unstable were excluded. Data were abstracted by chart review of EMS, community hospital ED, and specialty hospital records. Patients were compared to control patients with similar conditions who did not require secondary transport., Results: This study identified 211 medical or minor trauma pediatric secondary transport patients between 2013 and 2014. The three most prevalent conditions were seizure (n = 52), isolated orthopedic injury (n = 49), and asthma/respiratory distress (n = 27). Increased odds of secondary transport for seizure patients were associated with administration of supplemental oxygen, glucose measurement, and online medical direction; for isolated orthopedic injuries, online medical direction; and for asthma/respiratory distress, administration of supplemental oxygen, and online medical direction. Decreased odds of secondary transport for seizure patients were associated with a higher GCS; for isolated orthopedic injuries, increased age and oxygen saturation; and for asthma/respiratory distress, administration of albuterol only., Conclusions: Children with seizures, isolated orthopedic injuries, and asthma/respiratory distress comprised the majority of the medical or minor trauma pediatric secondary transport population. Each of those conditions had specific risk factors for secondary transport. This study's results provide information to guide future prospective studies and the development of direct transport protocols for those populations.
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- 2018
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44. Interhospital Transport of Children Undergoing Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation: A Practical and Ethical Dilemma.
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Noje C, Fishe JN, Costabile PM, Klein BL, Hunt EA, and Pronovost PJ
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- Child, Humans, Patient Safety, Quality of Health Care, Risk Assessment, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation ethics, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation methods, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation standards, Heart Arrest therapy, Transportation of Patients ethics, Transportation of Patients methods, Transportation of Patients standards
- Abstract
Objectives: To discuss risks and benefits of interhospital transport of children in cardiac arrest undergoing cardiopulmonary resuscitation., Design: Narrative review., Results: Not applicable., Conclusions: Transporting children in cardiac arrest with ongoing cardiopulmonary resuscitation between hospitals is potentially lifesaving if it enables access to resources such as extracorporeal support, but may risk transport personnel safety. Research is needed to optimize outcomes of patients transported with ongoing cardiopulmonary resuscitation and reduce risks to the staff caring for them.
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- 2017
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45. Needle in a Haystack: When Syncope Is Not Benign.
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Fishe JN
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Coronary Angiography, Coronary Vessel Anomalies complications, Humans, Male, Coronary Vessel Anomalies diagnostic imaging, Coronary Vessel Anomalies surgery, Syncope etiology
- Published
- 2016
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46. Lyme Myocarditis Presenting as Chest Pain in an Adolescent Girl.
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Fishe JN, Marchese RF, and Callahan JM
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- Adolescent, Diagnosis, Differential, Female, Humans, Lyme Disease diagnosis, Myocarditis microbiology
- Abstract
A previously healthy adolescent girl presented to the emergency department with new onset chest and right upper quadrant abdominal pain. Laboratory studies and imaging were consistent with myocarditis. She developed heart block after admission and required stabilization in the cardiac intensive care unit. Lyme serology returned positive, and her condition was diagnosed as Lyme disease-associated myocarditis.
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- 2016
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47. After-Hours Call Center Triage of Pediatric Head Injury: Outcomes After a Concussion Initiative.
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Fishe JN, Luberti AA, Master CL, Robinson RL, Grady MF, Arbogast KB, and Zonfrillo MR
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- Adolescent, Algorithms, Child, Child, Preschool, Disease Management, Female, Humans, Male, Outcome Assessment, Health Care, Referral and Consultation statistics & numerical data, Retrospective Studies, Brain Concussion diagnosis, Call Centers statistics & numerical data, Triage statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Objective: The aim of the study was to characterize referral patterns and medical outcomes of children with head injury triaged by an after-hours call center of a large urban pediatric network, both before and after an institutional concussion initiative. The initiative included a revised call center triage algorithm referring patients with a suspected concussion to see a primary care provider (PCP) within 24 hours, concussion-specific continuing education for medical providers, and a new concussion information Web site., Methods: Patients aged 5 to 18 years with head injury using the after-hours call center were identified by retrospective review of electronic medical records before (2011) and after (2012) the initiative. A random 50% sample was taken from each year for further analysis., Results: A total of 127 and 159 eligible patient encounters were randomly selected from 2011 to 2012, respectively. From 2011 to 2012, PCP referrals significantly increased from 7% (95% confidence interval [CI], 4%-13%) to 38% (95% CI, 31%-45%), P < 0.001. Concussion diagnoses also significantly increased from 35% (95% CI, 27%-44%) to 58% (95% CI, 50%-66%), P < 0.001. Emergency department referrals and head computed tomography scans decreased but the differences were not statistically significant. No patients had intracranial injury on computed tomography. Most injuries were not sports related., Conclusions: After an institutional concussion initiative including implementation of a revised head trauma telephone triage algorithm, more head injuries were evaluated by PCPs and more concussions were ultimately diagnosed without an increase in emergency department referrals. Clinicians can benefit from continuing education and infrastructure to aid in initial concussion diagnosis and management.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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