O'Hara Rachel, Sampson Fiona C, Long Jaqui, Coster Joanne, Pilbery Richard
Sheffield Centre for Health and Related Research (SCHARR), The University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK
Sheffield Centre for Health and Related Research (SCHARR), The University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK.
Emerg Med J. 2024 Aug 17;42(1). doi: 10.1136/emermed-2023-213849.
Ambulance clinicians use pre-alerts to inform receiving hospitals of the imminent arrival of a time-critical patient considered to require immediate attention, enabling the receiving emergency department (ED) or other clinical area to prepare. Pre-alerts are key to ensuring immediate access to appropriate care, but unnecessary pre-alerts can divert resources from other patients and fuel 'pre-alert fatigue' among ED staff. This research aims to provide a better understanding of pre-alert decision-making practice.
Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 34 ambulance clinicians from three ambulance services and 40 ED staff from six receiving EDs. Observation (162 hours) of responses to pre-alerts (n=143, call-to-handover) was also conducted in the six EDs. Interview transcripts and observation notes were imported into NVIVO and analysed using thematic analysis.
Pre-alert decisions involve rapid assessment of clinical risk based on physiological observations, clinical judgement and perceived risk of deterioration, with reference to pre-alert guidance. Clinical experience (pattern recognition and intuition) and confidence helped ambulance clinicians to understand which patients required immediate ED care on arrival or were at highest risk of deterioration. Ambulance clinicians primarily learnt to pre-alert 'on the job' and via informal feedback mechanisms, including the ED response to previous pre-alerts. Availability and access to clinical decision support was variable, and clinicians balanced the use of guidance and protocols with concerns about retention of clinical judgement and autonomy. Differences in pre-alert criteria between ambulance services and EDs created difficulties in deciding whether to pre-alert and was particularly challenging for less experienced clinicians.
We identified potentially avoidable variation in decision-making, which has implications for patient care and emergency care resources, and can create tension between the services. Consistency in practice may be improved by greater standardisation of guidance and protocols, training and access to performance feedback and cross-service collaboration to minimise potential sources of tension.
救护车临床医生使用预先警报来通知接收医院有时间紧迫的患者即将到达,这类患者被认为需要立即关注,以便接收的急诊科(ED)或其他临床区域做好准备。预先警报是确保能立即获得适当护理的关键,但不必要的预先警报会使资源从其他患者那里转移,并加剧急诊科工作人员的“预先警报疲劳”。本研究旨在更好地了解预先警报的决策实践。
对来自三个救护车服务机构的34名救护车临床医生和来自六个接收急诊科的40名急诊科工作人员进行了半结构化访谈。还在这六个急诊科对预先警报(n = 143,呼叫到交接)的响应进行了162小时的观察。访谈记录和观察笔记被导入NVIVO并使用主题分析法进行分析。
预先警报决策涉及根据生理观察、临床判断和感知到的病情恶化风险,并参考预先警报指南,对临床风险进行快速评估。临床经验(模式识别和直觉)和信心帮助救护车临床医生了解哪些患者到达时需要立即在急诊科接受治疗,或者哪些患者病情恶化风险最高。救护车临床医生主要是通过“在职”学习以及通过非正式反馈机制(包括急诊科对先前预先警报的响应)来学会发出预先警报。临床决策支持的可用性和获取情况各不相同,临床医生在使用指南和协议与担心保留临床判断和自主权之间进行权衡。救护车服务机构和急诊科之间预先警报标准的差异给决定是否发出预先警报带来了困难,对经验不足的临床医生来说尤其具有挑战性。
我们发现了决策中可能避免的差异,这对患者护理和急诊护理资源有影响,并且会在服务之间造成紧张关系。通过使指南和协议更加标准化、提供培训以及获取绩效反馈和跨服务协作,以尽量减少潜在的紧张源,可能会提高实践的一致性。