Blackwell Thomas H
The Center for Prehospital Medicine, Department of Emergency Medicine, Carolinas Medical Center, Charlotte, North Carolina 28232-2861, USA.
Semin Respir Crit Care Med. 2002 Feb;23(1):11-8. doi: 10.1055/s-2002-20584.
Financial pressures exerted by managed care organizations toward hospitals to improve efficiencies and to lower total healthcare costs continue to force physicians and administrators to reevaluate operations and practices. This shifting of risk exposure from insurers to providers has resulted in many mergers, acquisitions, and affiliations, so as to form integrated health systems that reduce repetition and duplication of services. Therefore, as these integrated systems develop, along with the emergence of tertiary care, regional referral, and specialty hospitals, the need for patient transfers between such facilities will expand. The decision to move patients between facilities is a multicomponent process comprising health, safety, financial, and legal concerns. Interfacility transportation of patients has been performed over the past 20 to 30 years. Whereas ground transport services were prominent in the 1970s, air medical programs using helicopters and fixed-wing aircraft have recently become widespread. Both hospital-based and private agencies have continued to develop programs for efficiently and expeditiously transporting critically ill or injured patients, many requiring complex life-support devices. The Practice Management Committee of the American College of Emergency Physicians recently updated the 1990 policy statement on interfacility transfers, and two position statements are available from the National Association of EMS Physicians on criteria for air medical transport and medical direction for interfacility transport services. This review provides an overview of transportation systems and services available and assists physicians in understanding the various modes and characteristics of systems available. Personnel configurations and capabilities, physiological limitations, inherent requirements for equipment and patient preparation, and legal issues involved with transferring patients are also outlined.
管理式医疗组织对医院施加的财务压力,要求医院提高效率并降低总体医疗成本,这继续迫使医生和管理人员重新评估运营和做法。风险暴露从保险公司向医疗服务提供者的这种转移,导致了许多合并、收购和联盟,从而形成了减少服务重复和重叠的综合医疗系统。因此,随着这些综合系统的发展,以及三级医疗、区域转诊和专科医院的出现,此类机构之间患者转运的需求将会增加。在不同机构间转移患者的决策是一个多方面的过程,涉及健康、安全、财务和法律等方面的考量。在过去二三十年里,已经开展了机构间患者转运工作。20世纪70年代地面运输服务占主导地位,而最近使用直升机和固定翼飞机的空中医疗项目变得普遍起来。医院所属机构和私人机构都在继续开发项目,以便高效、迅速地转运危重症或受伤患者,其中许多患者需要复杂的生命支持设备。美国急诊医师学会实践管理委员会最近更新了1990年关于机构间转运的政策声明,美国紧急医疗服务医师协会也发布了两份立场声明,分别涉及空中医疗运输标准和机构间运输服务的医疗指导。本综述概述了现有的运输系统和服务,并帮助医生了解可用系统的各种模式和特点。还概述了人员配置和能力、生理限制、设备和患者准备的内在要求以及患者转运所涉及的法律问题。