Level of Comfort With Pediatric Trauma Transports: Survey of Prehospital Providers.


Journal

The American surgeon
ISSN: 1555-9823
Titre abrégé: Am Surg
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 0370522

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
Jul 2021
Historique:
pubmed: 22 12 2020
medline: 14 9 2021
entrez: 21 12 2020
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Unintentional injury is the leading cause of death in pediatric patients. Despite a heavy burden of pediatric trauma, prehospital transport and triage of pediatric trauma patients are not standardized. Prehospital providers report anxiety and a lack of confidence in transport, triage, and care of pediatric trauma patients. Prehospital transport providers with 3 organizations across southeast Georgia and northeast Florida were contacted via email (n = 146) and asked to complete 2 Web-based surveys to evaluate their comfort level with performing tasks in the transport of pediatric and adult trauma patients. Bivariate statistics and qualitative thematic analyses were performed to assess comfort with pediatric trauma transports. Survey 1 (N = 35) showed that mean comfort levels of prehospital providers were significantly lower for pediatric patients than adult trauma patients in 7 out of 9 tasks queried, including airway management and interpreting children's physiology. The following themes emerged from survey 2 (N = 14) responses: additional clinical knowledge resources would be beneficial when caring for pediatric trauma patients, pediatric medication administration is a source of uncertainty, prehospital transport teams would benefit from additional pediatric trauma training, infrequent transport of pediatric trauma patients affects provider comfort level, and pediatric trauma generates higher levels of anxiety among providers. Prehospital transport of pediatric trauma patients is infrequent and a source of anxiety for prehospital providers. Rigs should be equipped with a reference tool addressing crucial tasks and deficiencies in training.

Sections du résumé

BACKGROUND BACKGROUND
Unintentional injury is the leading cause of death in pediatric patients. Despite a heavy burden of pediatric trauma, prehospital transport and triage of pediatric trauma patients are not standardized. Prehospital providers report anxiety and a lack of confidence in transport, triage, and care of pediatric trauma patients.
MATERIALS AND METHODS METHODS
Prehospital transport providers with 3 organizations across southeast Georgia and northeast Florida were contacted via email (n = 146) and asked to complete 2 Web-based surveys to evaluate their comfort level with performing tasks in the transport of pediatric and adult trauma patients. Bivariate statistics and qualitative thematic analyses were performed to assess comfort with pediatric trauma transports.
RESULTS RESULTS
Survey 1 (N = 35) showed that mean comfort levels of prehospital providers were significantly lower for pediatric patients than adult trauma patients in 7 out of 9 tasks queried, including airway management and interpreting children's physiology. The following themes emerged from survey 2 (N = 14) responses: additional clinical knowledge resources would be beneficial when caring for pediatric trauma patients, pediatric medication administration is a source of uncertainty, prehospital transport teams would benefit from additional pediatric trauma training, infrequent transport of pediatric trauma patients affects provider comfort level, and pediatric trauma generates higher levels of anxiety among providers.
DISCUSSION CONCLUSIONS
Prehospital transport of pediatric trauma patients is infrequent and a source of anxiety for prehospital providers. Rigs should be equipped with a reference tool addressing crucial tasks and deficiencies in training.

Identifiants

pubmed: 33345566
doi: 10.1177/0003134820973374
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

1171-1176

Auteurs

Lilly Bayouth (L)

Department of Surgery, Brody School of Medicine, 3627East Carolina University, Greenville, NC, USA.

Lauren Edgar (L)

Department of Surgery, College of Medicine, 137869University of Florida, Jacksonville, FL, USA.

Brent Richardson (B)

Department of Surgery, College of Medicine, 137869University of Florida, Jacksonville, FL, USA.

David Ebler (D)

Department of Surgery, College of Medicine, 137869University of Florida, Jacksonville, FL, USA.

Joseph J Tepas (JJ)

Department of Surgery, College of Medicine, 137869University of Florida, Jacksonville, FL, USA.

Marie L Crandall (ML)

Department of Surgery, College of Medicine, 137869University of Florida, Jacksonville, FL, USA.

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Classifications MeSH