Ventura Christian, Gibson Cody, Collier George Donald
Council on Research and Continuing Education, Health Advocacy and Medical Exploration Society, Inc. Lawrenceville, NJ 08648 USA.
Department of Natural Sciences, Bard College at Simon's Rock, Great Barrington, MA 01230 USA.
Heliyon. 2020 May 3;6(5):e03900. doi: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2020.e03900. eCollection 2020 May.
This study aimed to investigate available resources, Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) availability, sanitation practices, institutional policies, and opinions among EMS professionals in the United States amid the COVID-19 pandemic using a self-report survey questionnaire.
An online 42-question multiple choice survey was randomly distributed between April 1, 2020, and April 16, 2020 to various active Emergency Medical Services (EMS) paid personnel in all 50 U.S. states including the District of Columbia (n = 192). We approximate a 95% confidence interval (±0.07).
An overwhelming number of EMS providers report having limited access to N95 respirators, receiving little or no benefits from COVID-19 related work, and report no institutional policy on social distancing practices despite CDC recommendations. For providers who do have access to N95 respirators, 31% report having to use the same mask for 1 week or longer. Approximately ⅓ of the surveyed participants were unsure of when a COVID-19 patient is infectious. The data suggests regular decontamination of EMS equipment after each patient contact is not a regular practice.
Current practices to educate EMS providers on appropriate response to the novel coronavirus may not be sufficient, and future patients may benefit from a nationally established COVID-19 EMS response protocol. Further investigation on whether current EMS practices are contributing to the spread of infection is warranted. The data reveals concerning deficits in COVID-19 related education and administrative protocols which pose as a serious public health concern that should be urgently addressed.
本研究旨在通过一份自填式调查问卷,调查美国紧急医疗服务(EMS)专业人员在新冠疫情期间可获得的资源、个人防护装备(PPE)的供应情况、卫生习惯、机构政策及相关意见。
2020年4月1日至4月16日,一项包含42个问题的在线多项选择题调查被随机分发给美国50个州(包括哥伦比亚特区)的各类在职紧急医疗服务(EMS)带薪人员(n = 192)。我们估算出95%置信区间(±0.07)。
绝大多数EMS提供者报告称难以获得N95口罩,在与新冠疫情相关的工作中获得的福利很少或没有,并且尽管有疾病控制与预防中心(CDC)的建议,但报告称没有关于社交距离措施的机构政策。对于有N95口罩可用的提供者,31%报告称必须使用同一个口罩达1周或更长时间。约三分之一的受调查参与者不确定新冠患者何时具有传染性。数据表明,每次接触患者后对EMS设备进行定期消毒并非常规做法。
当前对EMS提供者进行新型冠状病毒适当应对教育的做法可能不够充分,未来患者可能会受益于全国统一制定的新冠疫情EMS应对方案。有必要进一步调查当前的EMS做法是否在导致感染传播。数据揭示了与新冠疫情相关的教育和管理方案存在令人担忧的不足,这构成了一个严重的公共卫生问题,应紧急加以解决。