National Centre for Emergency Primary Health Care, Kalfarveien 31, NO-5018 Bergen, Norway.
Scand J Trauma Resusc Emerg Med. 2009 Jul 8;17:30. doi: 10.1186/1757-7241-17-30.
The municipalities are responsible for the emergency primary health care services in Norway. These services include casualty clinics, primary doctors on-call and local emergency medical communication centres (LEMC). The National centre for emergency primary health care has initiated an enterprise called "The Watchtowers", comprising emergency primary health care districts, to provide routine information (patients' way of contact, level of urgency and first action taken by the out-of-hours services) over several years based on a minimal dataset. This will enable monitoring, evaluation and comparison of the respective activities in the emergency primary health care services. The aim of this study was to assess incidence of emergency contacts (potential life-threatening situations, red responses) to the emergency primary health care service.
A representative sample of Norwegian emergency primary health care districts, "The Watchtowers" recorded all contacts and first action taken during the year of 2007. All the variables were continuously registered in a data program by the attending nurses and sent by email to the National Centre for Emergency Primary Health Care at a monthly basis.
During 2007 the Watchtowers registered 85 288 contacts, of which 1 946 (2.3%) were defined as emergency contacts (red responses), corresponding to a rate of 9 per 1 000 inhabitants per year. 65% of the instances were initiated by patient, next of kin or health personnel by calling local emergency medical communication centres or meeting directly at the casualty clinics. In 48% of the red responses, the first action taken was a call-out of doctor and ambulance. On a national basis we can estimate approximately 42 500 red responses per year in the EPH in Norway.
The emergency primary health care services constitute an important part of the emergency system in Norway. Patients call the LEMC or meet directly at casualty clinics with medical problems that initially are classified as a potentially life-threatening situation, a red response.
挪威各市政府负责提供紧急初级卫生保健服务。这些服务包括急救诊所、值班初级医生和当地紧急医疗通讯中心(LEMC)。国家紧急初级卫生保健中心发起了一个名为“瞭望塔”的企业,由紧急初级卫生保健区组成,以提供多年的常规信息(患者联系方式、紧急程度和初级保健服务的首次行动),基于最小数据集。这将使能够监测、评估和比较紧急初级卫生保健服务的各自活动。本研究的目的是评估对紧急初级卫生保健服务的紧急联系(潜在危及生命的情况,红色响应)的发生率。
挪威紧急初级卫生保健区的代表性样本,“瞭望塔”记录了 2007 年全年的所有联系和首次行动。所有变量均由值班护士在数据程序中连续记录,并以电子邮件形式每月发送至国家紧急初级卫生保健中心。
2007 年,瞭望塔登记了 85288 次联系,其中 1946 次(2.3%)被定义为紧急联系(红色响应),相当于每年每 1000 名居民 9 次。65%的情况是由患者、亲属或卫生人员通过拨打当地紧急医疗通讯中心或直接到急救诊所发起的。在 48%的红色响应中,采取的第一个行动是派出医生和救护车。在全国范围内,我们可以估计挪威 EPH 每年约有 42500 次红色响应。
紧急初级卫生保健服务构成了挪威紧急系统的重要组成部分。患者因医疗问题拨打 LEMC 或直接到急救诊所就诊,这些问题最初被归类为潜在危及生命的情况,即红色响应。