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Published in: Internal and Emergency Medicine 6/2019

01-09-2019 | Suicide | EM - ORIGINAL

Intensity of care delivered by prehospital emergency medical service physicians to patients with deliberate self-poisoning: results from a 2-day cross-sectional study in France

Authors: Maxime Maignan, Damien Viglino, Roselyne Collomb Muret, Nathan Vejux, Eric Wiel, Laurent Jacquin, Said Laribi, Papa N-Gueye, Luc-Marie Joly, Florence Dumas, Sebastien Beaune, The IRU-SFMU Group

Published in: Internal and Emergency Medicine | Issue 6/2019

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Abstract

Emergency management of deliberate self-poisoning (DSP) by drug overdose is common in emergency medicine. There is a paucity of data about the prehospital care of these patients. The principal aim was to describe the intensity of care received by patients with DSP who were managed by prehospital emergency medical service (EMS) physicians. A 48-h cross-sectional study was conducted in 319 EMS and emergency units in France. Patient and poisoning characteristics and treatments administered were recorded. Complications of poisoning, hospitalization, intensive care unit admission and death were recorded until day 30. The primary endpoint was the probability of receiving prehospital intensive care, including fluid resuscitation, vasopressor therapy, invasive ventilation, or antidotal treatments, depending whether prehospital treatment was carried out by an EMS physician or not. Data from 703 patients (median age was 43 [30–52] years, 288 (40%) men) were analyzed. One hundred and fifteen (16%) patients were attended by an EMS physician. Patients attended by EMS physicians were more likely to receive intensive treatment in the prehospital setting [odds ratio (OR) 7.4, 95% confidence interval 4.3–12.9]. These patients had more severe poisoning as suggested mainly by a lower Glasgow Coma Score (13 [8–15] vs. 15 [15–15]; p < 0.001) and a higher rate of admission to an intensive care unit [29 (25%) vs. 15 (2%), p < 0.001]. Patients with DSP attended by prehospital EMS physicians frequently received intensive care. The level of care seemed appropriate for the severity of the poisoning.
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Metadata
Title
Intensity of care delivered by prehospital emergency medical service physicians to patients with deliberate self-poisoning: results from a 2-day cross-sectional study in France
Authors
Maxime Maignan
Damien Viglino
Roselyne Collomb Muret
Nathan Vejux
Eric Wiel
Laurent Jacquin
Said Laribi
Papa N-Gueye
Luc-Marie Joly
Florence Dumas
Sebastien Beaune
The IRU-SFMU Group
Publication date
01-09-2019
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Published in
Internal and Emergency Medicine / Issue 6/2019
Print ISSN: 1828-0447
Electronic ISSN: 1970-9366
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11739-019-02108-1

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