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SKYAID | BMJ 1999;319:1150-1150 ( 30 October )
http://www.bmj.com/cgi/content/full/319/7218/1150
How much to do at the accident scene?Spend time on essentials, save lives The argument over how much care to give trauma
victims at the scene of an accident reflects the development of the ambulance
service. Originally the ambulance service simply provided a means of
transport to hospital. As such the best policy was to scoop the
victim up and run as fast as possible to the hospital, where treatment
was started Preventable deaths in prehospital care are rarely
due to unavailability of advanced techniques but more often to failure to treat
basic ABC (airway, breathing, and circulation) problems.1
Although fluid administration may be delayed in many circumstances This debate over scoop and run or stay and play serves only to perpetuate the swinging of the pendulum. There is likely to be no single answer for the care of the critically injured. Each patient needs individual assessment of his or her needs. Paramedics have been restricted by protocols, which are often inflexible, because their training has not been broad enough to allow more flexible guidelines. Doctors have also tended to overestimate the skills of paramedics.5 The Audit Commission has asked what training staff will need to deliver the new ambulance service.6 There is no doubt that paramedic training needs to concentrate more on patient assessment and less on skills usage. Continuing education also needs improvement as 61% of British ambulance services fail to provide this.7 Changes are needed if the paramedic is to be an independent practitioner rather than a protocol based provider. Graduate courses are now evolving which will provide the underpinning knowledge for the new breed of paramedic.8 Changes in the structure of the service are also needed. In hospital medicine we are gradually moving to a consultant led service, but prehospital care is still largely provided by one grade of paramedic. In most ambulance services promotion means loss of patient contact. Some services are developing clinical supervisors with increased training and experience, who can be sent to more serious incidents, just as senior staff in hospital are summoned to life threatening trauma. Better integration of care between ambulance services and accident and emergency departments could also lead to better training and increased understanding.9 Ambulance services are introducing medical directors,10 and some have online medical assistance from doctor to paramedic via the radio. The involvement of doctors at accident scenes, however, continues to be mostly on a voluntary basis through the BASICS (British Association for Immediate Care) schemes. With increased assessment skills, paramedics can
make informed decisions about what is appropriate at the scene. The crucial
decision is what is the definitive care for each patient Two ambulance personnel have to undertake ABC
priorities serially (and treatment en route is by only one person), whereas
a hospital trauma team will run these in parallel and complete resuscitation
more quickly. If the distance to hospital is short resuscitation may
be completed earlier by rapid transfer to the awaiting
multidisciplinary hospital trauma team. We should now spend time
wisely at the scene only on critical interventions and save the time
to definitive care. Let us hope that both scoop and run and stay and
play are laid to rest. With more highly trained staff we should aim
to "spend and save" for trauma and all prehospital care. Emergency Medicine Research Group, Centre
for Primary Health Care Studies, University of Warwick, Coventry CV4 7AL (MWCooke@emerg-uk.com)
See also continued discussion |