Prehospital Incidence of Obstetric and Gynecologic Emergencies - A Retrospective Cohort Analysis
- Conditions
- O80N94R10.0Single spontaneous deliveryPain and other conditions associated with female genital organs and menstrual cycleAcute abdomen
- Registration Number
- DRKS00034595
- Lead Sponsor
- niversitätsklinikum Ulm, Klinik für Anästhesiologie und Intensivmedizin, Sektion Notfallmedizin
- Brief Summary
Not available
- Detailed Description
Not available
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- Pending
- Sex
- Female
- Target Recruitment
- 1246
All emergency medical interventions with a suspected gynecological or obstetric diagnosis
Suspected gynecological diagnosis documented in the EPRO-5.1-ABCDE (MIND 3.1) Operational Protocol (ITEM 4. Gynecologic/obstetric diagnosis: pregnancy > 35 weeks gestation, delivery, ectopic pregnancy, eclampsia, vaginal bleeding, other).
Patients with a diagnosis of acute abdomen are included for differential diagnosis and manually assessed.
Patients aged 12 to 45 years with a suspected diagnosis of pulmonary embolism or hypertensive derailment/hypertensive emergency are primarily included and manually evaluated as a possible concomitant disease of pregnancy (increased risk of thromboembolism, pregnancy-associated hypertension - eclampsia).
All non-gynecological/obstetric diagnoses except acute abdomen, pulmonary embolism, hypertension.
Study & Design
- Study Type
- observational
- Study Design
- Not specified
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Incidence of prehospital gynecologic and/or obstetric emergencies in the patient population and time period studied?
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Prehospital medications used in gynecologic/obstetric emergencies (type and dosage)<br><br>Average duration of intervention <br><br>Diagnostic quality of suspected emergency diagnosis compared with gynecologic/obstetric specialist diagnosis<br><br>Comparison of prehospital risk assessment using the NACA score (National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics - score for classifying the severity of illness and injury in the prehospital setting) with the severity of illness recorded in the emergency department.