Center for Disaster Health, Trauma and Resilience at Mount Sinai, Stony Brook University and Northwell Health, Great Neck, New York.
Donald and Barbara Zucker School of Medicine at Hofstra/Northwell, Department of Emergency Medicine, Hempstead, New York.
West J Emerg Med. 2022 May 5;23(3):396-407. doi: 10.5811/westjem.2022.2.55217.
The use of personal protective equipment (PPE) is a salient component of reducing occupational risk in many fields. Emergency medical services (EMS) personnel use PPE to reduce risk of exposure and defend against various pathogens they come in contact with while providing patient care. Currently, the understanding of factors that predict the use of PPE by an EMS responder during a pandemic is limited. In this study our objective was to identify factors that influenced PPE use by EMS responders during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, which may guide future planning for responders in similar austere or personal risk situations.
We conducted a retrospective chart review among all EMS encounters across an EMS agency affiliated with a large New York health system from March 16-June 30, 2020. All adult, emergency encounters with available prehospital record data were analyzed. We assessed patient- and EMS encounter-level data as possible factors that influence PPE utilization. The use of PPE was defined and guided by the literature as being either full or partial PPE, or "not documented." We used multinomial logistic regression to identify factors that influence PPE use among EMS responders.
We identified 28,693 eligible EMS encounters during the study period; 54.2% of patients were male, the median patient age was 58 years, and 66.9% of patients had at least one chronic medical condition. The use of PPE was documented in 92.8% of encounters, with full PPE used in 17.8% of these encounters. Full PPE utilization, relative to partial, was most strongly influenced by dispatch codes indicative of "breathing problems" (odds ratio [OR] 4.89; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 4.40, 5.46) and "cardiac/respiratory arrest" (OR 3.82; 95% CI: 2.99, 4.88), in addition to a patient's positive screening for COVID-19 on 9-1-1 dispatch (OR 3.97; 95% CI: 3.66, 4.32).
Emergency medical services responders more frequently used full PPE for calls with dispatch codes indicative of respiratory distress or cardiac arrest. Understanding factors that influence PPE use among EMS personnel, particularly during times of public health emergencies, is essential to mitigate exposure and ensure the safety of frontline responders.
在许多领域,使用个人防护设备(PPE)是降低职业风险的重要组成部分。急救医疗服务(EMS)人员使用 PPE 来降低接触患者时暴露的风险,并抵御各种病原体。目前,对于在大流行期间影响 EMS 响应者使用 PPE 的因素的了解有限。在这项研究中,我们的目标是确定影响 COVID-19 大流行期间 EMS 响应者使用 PPE 的因素,这可能为应对类似严峻或个人风险情况的未来响应者提供指导。
我们对隶属于一家大型纽约健康系统的 EMS 机构在 2020 年 3 月 16 日至 6 月 30 日期间的所有 EMS 接触情况进行了回顾性图表审查。分析了所有成人、有可用院前记录数据的紧急接触情况。我们评估了患者和 EMS 接触水平的数据,作为可能影响 PPE 使用的因素。根据文献,我们将 PPE 的使用定义为完全或部分 PPE,或“未记录”。我们使用多项逻辑回归来确定影响 EMS 响应者 PPE 使用的因素。
在研究期间,我们确定了 28693 次符合条件的 EMS 接触情况;54.2%的患者为男性,中位患者年龄为 58 岁,66.9%的患者至少有一种慢性疾病。92.8%的接触情况记录了 PPE 的使用,其中 17.8%的接触情况使用了完全 PPE。与部分 PPE 相比,完全 PPE 的使用受指示“呼吸问题”(优势比[OR]4.89;95%置信区间[CI]:4.40,4.86)和“心脏/呼吸骤停”(OR 3.82;95%CI:2.99,4.88)的调度代码的影响最大,此外,患者在 9-1-1 调度时 COVID-19 呈阳性筛查(OR 3.97;95%CI:3.66,4.32)。
在有指示呼吸窘迫或心脏骤停的调度代码的呼叫中,急救医疗服务响应者更频繁地使用完全 PPE。了解影响 EMS 人员 PPE 使用的因素,特别是在公共卫生紧急情况下,对于减轻接触风险和确保一线响应者的安全至关重要。