Research Department, National Registry of Emergency Medical Technicians, Columbus, Ohio, USA
Division of Epidemiology, The Ohio State University College of Public Health, Columbus, Ohio, USA.
Occup Environ Med. 2023 Nov;80(11):644-649. doi: 10.1136/oemed-2023-109053. Epub 2023 Oct 13.
Emergency medical services (EMS) clinicians operate in environments that predispose them to occupational hazards. Our objective was to evaluate the frequency of occupational hazards and associations with mitigation strategies in a national dataset.
We performed a cross-sectional analysis of currently working, nationally certified civilian EMS clinicians aged 18-85 in the USA. After recertifying their National EMS Certification, respondents were invited to complete a survey with questions regarding demographics, work experience and occupational hazards. Three multivariable logistic regression models (OR, 95% CI) were used to describe associations between these hazards and demographics, work characteristics and mitigation strategies. Models were adjusted for age, sex, minority status, years of experience, EMS agency type, service type and EMS role.
A total of 13 218 respondents met inclusion criteria (response rate=12%). A high percentage of EMS clinicians reported occupational injuries (27%), exposures (38%) and violence (64%) in the past 12 months. Odds of injury were lower with the presence of a lifting policy (0.73, 0.67-0.80), lift training (0.74, 0.67-0.81) and always using a powered stretcher (0.87, 0.78-0.97). Odds of exposure decreased with chemical, biological and nuclear exposure protection training (0.75, 0.69-0.80). Training in de-escalation techniques was associated with lower odds of experiencing violence (0.87, 0.79-0.96).
Occupational hazards are commonly experienced among EMS clinicians. Common mitigation efforts are associated with lower odds of reporting these hazards. Mitigation strategies were not widespread and associated with lower odds of occupational hazards. These findings may present actionable items to reduce occupational hazards for EMS clinicians.
急救医疗服务(EMS)临床医生在易发生职业危害的环境中工作。我们的目的是评估在全国性数据集中职业危害的发生频率及其与缓解策略的关联。
我们对美国年龄在 18-85 岁、具有国家认证的在职民用 EMS 临床医生进行了横断面分析。在重新认证其国家 EMS 认证后,邀请受访者完成一项调查,其中包含有关人口统计学、工作经验和职业危害的问题。使用三个多变量逻辑回归模型(OR,95%CI)来描述这些危害与人口统计学、工作特征和缓解策略之间的关联。模型根据年龄、性别、少数民族身份、工作年限、EMS 机构类型、服务类型和 EMS 角色进行了调整。
共有 13218 名符合纳入标准的受访者(应答率为 12%)。在过去 12 个月中,相当高比例的 EMS 临床医生报告有职业伤害(27%)、暴露(38%)和暴力(64%)。存在提升政策(0.73,0.67-0.80)、提升培训(0.74,0.67-0.81)和始终使用动力担架(0.87,0.78-0.97)可降低受伤的可能性。接受化学、生物和核暴露防护培训(0.75,0.69-0.80)可降低暴露的可能性。采用降级技术培训与经历暴力的可能性降低相关(0.87,0.79-0.96)。
职业危害在 EMS 临床医生中普遍存在。常见的缓解措施与报告这些危害的可能性降低相关。缓解策略并未广泛普及,且与职业危害的可能性降低相关。这些发现可能为减少 EMS 临床医生的职业危害提供可行的措施。