Rimstad Rune, Sollid Stephen Jm
Department of Research and Development, Norwegian Air Ambulance Foundation, Holterveien 24, 1448 Drøbak, Norway ; Medicine, Health and Development, Oslo University Hospital, Kirkeveien 166, 0424 Oslo, Nydalen Norway ; Department of Industrial Economics, Risk Management and Planning, University of Stavanger, Kjell Arholms gate 41, 4036 Stavanger, Norway.
Department of Research and Development, Norwegian Air Ambulance Foundation, Holterveien 24, 1448 Drøbak, Norway ; Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Stavanger, Kjell Arholms gate 41, 4036 Stavanger, Norway ; Air Ambulance Department, Oslo University Hospital, Kirkeveien 166, 0424 Oslo, Nydalen Norway.
Int J Emerg Med. 2015 Mar 4;8:4. doi: 10.1186/s12245-015-0052-9. eCollection 2015.
A core task for commanders in charge of an emergency response operation is to make decisions. The purposes of the study were to describe what critical decisions the ambulance commander and the medical commander make in a mass casualty incident response and to explore what the underlying conditions affecting decision-making are. The study was conducted in the context of the 2011 government district terrorist bombing in Norway.
The study was a retrospective, descriptive observational study collecting data through participating observation, semi-structured interviews, and recordings of emergency medical services' radio communications. Analysis was conducted using systematic text condensation. The ambulance commander was interviewed using the critical decision method.
The medical emergency response lasted 6.5 h, with little clinical activity after 2 h. Most critical decisions were made within the first 30 min, with the ambulance commander making the bulk of decisions. Situation assessment and underlying uncertainties strongly affected decision-making, but there was a mutual interaction between these three factors that developed throughout the different stages of the operation. Knowledge and experience were major determinants of how easily commanders picked up sensory cues and translated them into situation assessments. The number and magnitude of uncertainties were largest in the development stage, after most of the critical decisions had been made.
In the studied mass casualty incident, the commanders made most critical decisions in the early stages of the emergency response when resources did not meet demand. Decisions were made under significant uncertainty and time pressure. Ambulance and medical commanders should be prepared to make situation assessments and decisions early and be ready to adjust as uncertainties are reduced.
负责应急行动的指挥官的核心任务是做出决策。本研究的目的是描述在大规模伤亡事件应对中救护车指挥官和医疗指挥官做出的关键决策,并探讨影响决策的潜在条件。该研究是在2011年挪威政府行政区恐怖爆炸事件的背景下进行的。
本研究是一项回顾性描述性观察研究,通过参与观察、半结构化访谈以及紧急医疗服务的无线电通信记录来收集数据。采用系统文本浓缩法进行分析。使用关键决策方法对救护车指挥官进行访谈。
医疗应急响应持续了6.5小时,2小时后临床活动很少。大多数关键决策是在最初的30分钟内做出的,其中大部分决策由救护车指挥官做出。态势评估和潜在的不确定性对决策有很大影响,但在行动的不同阶段,这三个因素之间存在相互作用。知识和经验是指挥官能否轻松捕捉感官线索并将其转化为态势评估的主要决定因素。在大部分关键决策做出后的发展阶段,不确定性的数量和程度最大。
在所研究的大规模伤亡事件中,指挥官在应急响应的早期阶段做出了大多数关键决策,此时资源无法满足需求。决策是在重大不确定性和时间压力下做出的。救护车指挥官和医疗指挥官应准备好在早期进行态势评估和决策,并随时准备在不确定性降低时进行调整。