MedPath

Response Times in Danish Emergency Medical Services

Not yet recruiting
Conditions
Emergency Medical Services
Response
Triage
Survival Outcomes
Intensive Care Unit Days
Intensive Care Patients Invasively Ventilated
Registration Number
NCT06666647
Lead Sponsor
Peter Martin Hansen
Brief Summary

The overall aim of this retrospective observational study is to investigate the association of emergency medical services response time with patient survival and treatment outcomes.

The main question it aims to answer is:

What is the association between response time and patient survival?

The investigators will collect data for all patients who were treated by ambulance and/or helicopter services in Denmark and follow the patient's path from illness or injury to discharge from hospital with a focus on the significance of ambulance and helicopter response time.

Detailed Description

INTRODUCTION Background and rationale Response time, defined as the time from dispatch to arrival of the vehicle at the patient´s address for emergency medical services (EMS) units, may be essential in critical situations such as e.g., cardiac arrest and serious injury. Apart from these conditions, there is currently only limited or even contradictory evidence to support that a short response time is associated with improved patient survival and other treatment parameters. There are other significant factors that affect mortality in the acute phase, such as competence on prehospital care provider level, emergency department patient load and staffing shortages, that have been shown to affect mortality. Confounders such as bidirectional causality and confounding by indication may hinder scientific interpretation of response time importance and significance for patient outcomes in observational studies.

Importance of the study The results of the research project may contribute to establishing a scientific background for when response time matters for the patient and when it does not matter. Thereby, the investigators expect that the results can enable an evidence-based differentiation of ambulance response and degree of urgency and purvey the use of alternate key performance indicators and benchmarking in EMS systems.

Aims of the study This project aims to increase the knowledge about the possible association between response time and survival and treatment outcomes.

The overall aim is to investigate the association of response time with treatment outcomes, including patient survival.

Research questions in the study

1. Is there an association between ambulance/helicopter response time and patient survival?

2. Is there an association between ambulance/helicopter response time and intensive care treatment characteristics?

METHODS Ethics committee and other approvals required Approvals for the study were obtained from the Regional Secretariat and Legal Matters, Region Southern Denmark, Journal no. 23/30574 and from the Executive Secretariat, Odense University Hospital, Journal number 23/31007. From the Danish Clinical Quality Program - National Clinical Registries, the investigators obtained permissions as well (DAH-2024-02-16 and DID-2024-02-16). The investigators will store data in accordance with current Danish Data Protection Agency regulations via a license agreement with OPEN, Odense Patient data Exploratory Network.

Patient consent According to the Act on Processing of Personal Data, register-based studies approved by the Danish Patient Safety Authorities do not require consent to use data already entered into the registry.

Setting Danish EMS is free of charge for everyone. It is a three-tiered system, comprising emergency medical technician ambulances, paramedic ambulances and anesthesiologist-staffed mobile emergency care units. Further, a nationwide anesthesiologist-staffed helicopter EMS can be dispatched by all five health care regions. In total, approximately 300 ambulances, twenty-six mobile emergency care units and four helicopters are available in Denmark. The Danish EMS has been described in detail previously.

The Danish national distress number 1-1-2 provides one point of entry for citizens requiring emergency assistance from police, fire brigade or EMS. The 1-1-2 calls are received by three national command centers: two operated by the police and one by the Copenhagen fire brigade, relaying medical emergencies to the relevant health care regional Emergency Medical Dispatch Center. The dispatch center is responsible for the EMS response from receiving the call until the patient is handed over to a hospital or patient contact is finalized on scene or during the call. Each health region has its own dispatch center that operates prehospital units, using criteria-based dispatch.

Criteria-based dispatch In Denmark, criteria-based dispatch is the method of triaging in EMS. Based on the interview with the caller making the 1-1-2 call, the dispatch call-taker, usually a nurse or a paramedic, selects one of the 37 main symptom chapters with specific sub-chapters in the Danish Index support tool (See Table 1). Once entered into the computer-aided dispatch software, the criterion selected automatically triggers a response, which can either be an ambulance, a rapid response vehicle, a physician-manned unit, or a combination of those. Non-conveyance may also be the response plan. Every mission must have an assigned Danish Index criterion to be dispatched.

The prehospital personnel document and record all interventions and measurements in a wireless digital tablet named the Electronic Prehospital Patient Record System. Data are encrypted and stored on mainframe computers. When an ambulance crew is dispatched on a mission, all details such as address, time stamps, patient identification, vital parameters, medications used, and treatment details are collected during the patient contact. Data consistency is predominant as all EMS personnel are obliged to document their activities.

Data sources and collection The project will collect data from the Electronic Prehospital Patient Record System in the period from 1 January 2016 to 31 December 2022 on all patients in Denmark, who have been treated by ambulance and/or helicopter services, with response modes A (with lights and sirens) and B (without lights and sirens). Other forms of missions are not covered by the project. Further, data from Danish Intensive Care Database and Danish Database for Acute Hospital Contacts will be extracted as per the predefined data variable.

Data linkage The investigators will link data from Electronic Prehospital Patient Record with Danish Intensive Care Database and the Danish Database for Acute Hospital Contacts from 2016 to 2022 with one year follow-up. The purpose is to chart the patient path in the Danish healthcare system from illness or injury to discharge from hospital, death or e.g., emigration. Data will be linked via the patient's unique civil personal register number.

Data variables To answer the research questions in the planned study, the investigators will extract variables from the databases Electronic Prehospital Patient Record, Danish Intensive Care database and Danish database for Acute Hospital Contacts.

Guidelines The investigators will adhere to The Strengthening the Reporting of Observational studies in Epidemiology (STROBE) guidelines in the reporting of the study findings.

Missing data Missing data will be accounted for, and the investigators will use validated methods to mitigate the effects of missing data.

Measures Nominal results are expressed as medians with interquartile ranges or means with standard deviations. Odds and risk ratios are expressed with standard error and 95% confidence intervals.

Tables The investigators will produce tables to demonstrate the findings of the study in a tabular format, presenting all data of the included participants from the database searches.

Figures The investigators will construct a study flow-chart to illustrate the pathway of the study. Further, the investigators will develop a Directed Acyclic Graph to demonstrate the study pathway between exposure/treatment and outcome with confounders, expected study causalities and associations, and for a graphic overview of the study.

Analyses In the statistical analyses, the investigators will adjust for age, sex, acute illness, and chronic illness. Further, the investigators will use regression analysis, Kaplan-Meyer plots and linear regression models to assess and evaluate the association between response time and the primary and secondary outcomes. The investigators will use advanced statistical and epidemiological methods to assess confounders and biases and conduct a stratified analysis for each of the 37 dispatch categories.

In the analyses, the investigators will address causality, explained by way of the Bradford-Hill criteria, and the Sufficient-component cause model. The investigators will use Directed Acyclic Graphs to illustrate and identify measurable and unmeasurable confounders. The investigators will also apply causal mediation analysis as warranted, and address time-varying covariates and immortal time bias, if applicable.

Further, the investigators will use validated statistical methods to control for confounding including multivariable regression, stratification and inverse probability of treatment weighting and use this concept to mitigate and address time-dependent confounding.

Publications and dissemination The investigators plan to publish the results from the two studies in peer-reviewed scientific journals. Results will also be presented at relevant scientific congresses and meetings and on the project website, www.ahrtemis.dk.

In addition, the results will be presented in relevant publications, newspapers, digital media, television, social media, etc. Further, the AHRTEMIS project has planned a meeting in Q4 2024 with patients and relatives to formulate a layman's resume of the AHRTEMIS project synopsis and to define important aspects to EMS dispatch from the patient and relative perspective.

DISCUSSION In presenting the protocol for this substantive epidemiological assessment study, the investigators seek to pave the way for a comprehensive exploration of the association between EMS units' response time and patient survival and relevant outcomes in Denmark. The investigators will seek to scientifically quantify the importance and significance of response time association with patient outcomes, stratified as per selected Danish Index symptom-based criterion.

Through the adherence to validated guidelines such as the STROBE, the investigators aim to ensure consistent methodology and transparency in the reporting of the study findings. In the discussion of the findings, the investigators anticipate valuable insights to enhance clinical practice, guide future research in the field, and ultimately optimize the delivery of care for patient in need om emergency medical services treatment.

The use of advanced epidemiological and statistical methods will aide to mitigate major limitations that include confounding by indication and bidirectional causality, which are inherent in observational studies. The investigators will systematically address and quantify additional limitations, such as observation, classification, or measurement bias.

CONCLUSION In this epidemiological study, the investigators aim to describe the associations, if any, between EMS response time and patient survival and important outcome measures. The investigators will scientifically quantify the importance and significance of response time association with patient outcomes in a large material of Danish patients treated by ambulance and helicopter services from 2016-2022 with one year follow-up, using advanced epidemiological and statistical methodologies.

Table 1. Danish Index. Main symptom groups

Chapter Main symptoms

1. Unconscious adult

2. Unconscious child

3. Foreign body in airway

4. Disaster, major incident

5. Ordered task

6. Unclear problem

7. Allergic reaction

8. Bleeding, non-traumatic

9. Fire or electrical injury

10. Chest pain, heart disease

11. Diabetes

12. Drowning

13. Diving accident

14. Animal or insect bite

15. Fever

16. Poisoning in children

17. Childbirth

18. Gynecology, pregnancy

19. Headache

20. Skin and rashes

21. Hypothermia, hyperthermia

22. Chemicals, gasses

23. Seizures

24. Abdominal or back pain

25. Possible death or sudden infant death

26. Impaired consciousness, paralysis

27. Psychiatry, suicidal

28. Breathing difficulties

29. Intoxication, medications, alcohol, drug overdose

30. Sick child

31. Minor wound, fracture, injury

32. Traffic accident

33. Accident, not related to traffic

34. Urinary tract

35. Violence, abuse

36. Ear, nose, throat

37. Eye

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
NOT_YET_RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
2500000
Inclusion Criteria
  • Every patient in Denmark in need of ambulance and/or helicopter services treatment in Denmark from 2016-2022 with outgoing response mode A (with lights and sirens) and B (without lights and sirens) is eligible for inclusion in the study.
Exclusion Criteria
  • No civil personal registration number available
  • Patient not identified
  • Patient not entered in the prehospital electronic patient journal
  • invalid data entered
  • No linkage between substitue personal register number and actual personal register number for patients identified later;

Study & Design

Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Study Design
Not specified
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
30-day survivalStatus at 30 days after hospital admission

Patient is alive 30 days after hospital admission

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
7-day survivalStatus at seven days after hospital admission

The patient is alive seven days after hospital admission

90-day survivalStatus at 90 days after hospital admission

The patient is alive 90 days after hospital admission

Survival to hospital dischargeStatus at hospital discharge, assessed up to 5 days

Patient is alive on hospital discharge

48 hour survivalStatus at 48 hours after hospital admission

The patient is alive 48 hours after hospital admission

24 hour survivalStatus at 24 hours after hospital admission

The patient is alive 24 hours after hospital admission

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Odense University Hospital

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Odense, Denmark

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