Declerck Matthieu P, Atterton Laurie M, Seibert Thomas, Cushing Tracy A
Department of Emergency Medicine, Denver Health Medical Center, Denver, CO.
Wilderness Environ Med. 2013 Sep;24(3):195-202. doi: 10.1016/j.wem.2013.01.009. Epub 2013 May 9.
Outdoor recreation is growing in the United States, with more than 279 million annual visitors to areas controlled by the National Park Service (NPS). Emergency medical needs in these parks are overseen by the National Park's rangers within the NPS Emergency Medical Services (EMS) system. This study examines medical and traumatic emergencies throughout the NPS over a 5-year period to better understand the types of events and fatalities rangers encounter, both regionally and on a national scale.
This is a retrospective review of the annual EMS reports published by the 7 NPS regions from 2007 to 2011. The following were compared and examined at a regional and national level: medical versus traumatic versus first aid events, cardiac events and outcomes, use of automated external defibrillators, and medical versus traumatic fatalities.
The national incidence of EMS events was 45.9 events per 1 million visitors. Medical, traumatic, and first aid events composed 29%, 28%, and 43% of reports, respectively. Of medical episodes, 1.8% were cardiac arrests, of which 64.2% received automated external defibrillator treatment; 29.1% of cardiac arrests survived to hospital discharge. Of fatalities, 61.4% were traumatic in nature and the remaining 38.5% were nontraumatic (medical). Regional differences were found for all variables.
On a national level, the NPS experiences an equal number of medical and traumatic EMS events. This differs from past observed trends that reported a higher incidence of traumatic events than medical events in wilderness settings. Cardiac events and automated external defibrillator usage are relatively infrequent. Traumatic fatalities are more common than medical fatalities in the NPS. Regional variations in events likely reflect differences in terrain, common activities, proximity to urban areas, and access to definitive care between regions. These data can assist the NPS in targeting the regions with the greatest number of incidents and fatalities for prevention, ranger training, and visitor education.
户外休闲活动在美国日益兴起,每年有超过2.79亿人前往由国家公园管理局(NPS)管理的区域。这些公园内的紧急医疗需求由国家公园管理局紧急医疗服务(EMS)系统中的护林员负责监管。本研究调查了5年期间国家公园管理局各地的医疗和创伤性紧急情况,以更好地了解护林员在区域和全国范围内遇到的事件类型和死亡情况。
这是一项对2007年至2011年7个国家公园管理局区域发布的年度EMS报告的回顾性研究。在区域和国家层面比较并检查了以下内容:医疗事件与创伤事件与急救事件、心脏事件及结果、自动体外除颤器的使用情况,以及医疗死亡与创伤死亡情况。
EMS事件的全国发生率为每100万游客45.9起事件。医疗、创伤和急救事件分别占报告的29%、28%和43%。在医疗事件中,1.8%为心脏骤停,其中64.2%接受了自动体外除颤器治疗;29.1%的心脏骤停患者存活至出院。在死亡病例中,61.4%为创伤性死亡,其余38.5%为非创伤性(医疗)死亡。所有变量均存在区域差异。
在全国范围内,国家公园管理局遇到的医疗和创伤性EMS事件数量相当。这与过去观察到的趋势不同,过去报告称在荒野环境中创伤事件的发生率高于医疗事件。心脏事件和自动体外除颤器的使用相对较少。在国家公园管理局,创伤性死亡比医疗性死亡更常见。事件的区域差异可能反映了不同区域在地形、常见活动、与城市地区的距离以及获得确定性治疗的机会等方面的差异。这些数据可帮助国家公园管理局针对事件和死亡人数最多的区域进行预防、护林员培训和游客教育。