Author:
Jensen Jan L.,Carter Alix J.E.,Rose Jennifer,Visintini Sarah,Bourdon Emmanuelle,Brown Ryan,McVey Jennifer,Travers Andrew H.
Abstract
AbstractObjectivesEmergency medical services (EMS) programs, which provide an alternative to traditional EMS dispatch or transport to the emergency department (ED), are becoming widely implemented. This scoping review identified and catalogued all outcomes used to measure such alternative EMS programs.Data SourceBroad systematized bibliographic and grey literature searches were conducted.Study SelectionInclusion criteria were 911 callers/EMS patients, reported on alternatives to traditional EMS dispatch OR traditional EMS transport to the ED, and reported an outcome measure.Data ExtractionThe reports were categorized as either alternative to dispatch or to EMS transport, and outcome measures were categorized and described.Data SynthesisThe bibliographic search retrieved 13,215 records, of which 34 articles met the inclusion criteria, with an additional 10 added from reference list hand-searching (n=44 included). In the grey literature search, 31 websites were identified, from which four met criteria and were retrieved (n=4 included). Fifteen reports (16 studies) described alternatives to EMS dispatch, and 33 reports described alternatives to EMS transport. The most common outcomes reported in the alternatives to EMS dispatch reports were service utilization and decision accuracy. Twenty-four different specific outcomes were reported. The most common outcomes reported in the alternatives to EMS transport reports were service utilization and safety, and 50 different specific outcomes were reported.ConclusionsNumerous outcome measures were identified in reports of alternative EMS programs, which were catalogued and described. Researchers and program leaders should achieve consensus on uniform outcome measures, to allow benchmarking and improve comparison across programs.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
10 articles.
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