Injury. 2025 Jan;56(1):111522. doi: 10.1016/j.injury.2024.111522. Epub 2024 Apr 2.
Though the disease burden addressable by prehospital and out-of-hospital emergency care(OHEC) spans communicable diseases, maternal conditions, chronic conditions and injury, the single largest disability-adjusted life year burden contributor is injury, primarily driven by road traffic injuries(RTIs). Establishing OHEC for RTIs and other common emergencies in low- and middle-income countries(LMICs) where the injury burden is disproportionately greatest is a logical first step toward more comprehensive emergency medical services(EMS). However, with limited efforts to formalize and expand existing informal bystander care networks, there is a lack of consensus on how to develop and maintain bystander-driven Tier-1 EMS systems in LMICs. Resultantly, Tier-1 EMS development is fragmented among non-governmental organizations and the public sector globally.
A steering committee coordinated a 9-round, modified Delphi-based expert discussion to identify current challenges, opportunities, and priorities in Tier-1 EMS development globally. 11 panelists represented seven Global Prehospital Consortium(GPC) member organizations with a mean 9.57 years of organizational Tier-1 EMS development/implementation experience(median = 9 years). The consortium represents the largest collaboration between organizations directing Tier-1 EMS programs globally across 12 countries on 3 continents(Americas, sub-Saharan Africa, and South Asia) with 22,000 first responders.
The GPC identified seven priority areas for Tier-1 EMS development: infrastructure/operations, communication, education/training, impact evaluation, financing, governance/legal, and transportation/equipment. A high level of consensus exists regarding priorities for investigation, including Tier-1 responder density/distribution, Tier-1 patient data variable standardization for trauma registries/quality improvement, dispatch technologies/protocols, modular curricula, broader cost-effectiveness and impact evaluation indices capturing secondary impacts of EMS, standardizing legal protections for first responders, and transportation/equipment standards.
Consensus is necessary to avoid duplicative and disorganized efforts due to the fragmented nature of parallel Tier-1 EMS efforts globally. A Delphi-like multi-round expert discussion among the members of the largest collaboration between organizations directing Tier-1 EMS programs globally generated relevant priorities to direct future efforts.
尽管院前和院外紧急护理(OHEC)可应对的疾病负担涵盖传染病、孕产妇疾病、慢性病和伤害,但伤残调整生命年负担的最大单一贡献者是伤害,主要由道路交通伤害(RTIs)驱动。在低收入和中等收入国家(LMICs)建立针对道路交通伤害和其他常见紧急情况的院外紧急护理,这些国家的伤害负担尤其严重,这是朝着更全面的紧急医疗服务(EMS)迈出的合乎逻辑的第一步。然而,由于在规范和扩展现有的非正式旁观者护理网络方面所做的努力有限,对于如何在低收入和中等收入国家发展和维持由旁观者驱动的一级紧急医疗服务系统缺乏共识。结果,全球范围内一级紧急医疗服务的发展在非政府组织和公共部门之间分散进行。
一个指导委员会协调了9轮基于德尔菲法的专家讨论,以确定全球一级紧急医疗服务发展当前面临的挑战、机遇和优先事项。11名小组成员代表了七个全球院前联盟(GPC)成员组织,他们在组织一级紧急医疗服务发展/实施方面的平均经验为9.57年(中位数 = 9年)。该联盟代表了全球范围内指导一级紧急医疗服务项目的组织之间最大规模的合作,覆盖三大洲(美洲、撒哈拉以南非洲和南亚)的12个国家,拥有22,000名急救人员。
全球院前联盟确定了一级紧急医疗服务发展的七个优先领域:基础设施/运营、通信、教育/培训、影响评估、融资、治理/法律以及运输/设备。对于调查的优先事项存在高度共识,包括一级急救人员密度/分布、用于创伤登记/质量改进的一级患者数据变量标准化、调度技术/协议、模块化课程、涵盖紧急医疗服务二次影响的更广泛的成本效益和影响评估指标、规范对急救人员的法律保护以及运输/设备标准。
由于全球一级紧急医疗服务工作的分散性质,达成共识对于避免重复和无序的努力是必要的。在全球范围内指导一级紧急医疗服务项目的组织之间最大规模的合作成员之间进行的类似德尔菲法的多轮专家讨论产生了指导未来工作的相关优先事项。