Emergency medical services clinicians in the United States are increasingly exposed to death

Author:

Breyre Amelia1,Crowe Remle P.2,Fernandez Antonio R.2,Jabr Alexandra3,Myers J. Brent2,Kupas Douglas F.4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Emergency Medicine Yale University New Haven Connecticut USA

2. ESO Austin Texas USA

3. Emergency Resilience Sacramento California USA

4. Geisinger Health System Danville Pennsylvania USA

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionExposure to patient death places healthcare workers at increased risk for burnout and traumatic stress, yet limited data exist exploring exposure to death among emergency medical services (EMS) clinicians. Our objective was to describe changes in EMS encounters involving on‐scene death from 2018 to 2021.MethodsWe retrospectively analyzed deidentified EMS records for 9‐1‐1 responses from the ESO Data Collaborative from 2018 to 2021. We identified cases where patient dispositions of death on scene, with or without attempted resuscitation, and without EMS transport. A non‐parametric test of trend was used to assess for monotonic increase in agency‐level encounters involving on‐scene death and the proportion of EMS clinicians exposed to ≥1 on‐scene death.ResultsWe analyzed records from 1109 EMS agencies. These agencies responded to 4,286,976 calls in 2018, 5,097,920 calls in 2019, 4,939,651 calls in 2020, and 5,347,340 calls in 2021.The total number of encounters with death on scene rose from 49,802 in 2018 to 60,542 in 2019 to 76,535 in 2020 and 80,388 in 2021. Agency‐level annual counts of encounters involving death on scene rose from a median of 14 (interquartile range [IQR], 4–40) in 2018 to 2023 (IQR, 6–63) in 2021 (P‐trend < 0.001). In 2018, 56% of EMS clinicians responded to a call with death on scene, and this number rose to 63% of EMS clinicians in 2021 (P‐trend < 0.001).ConclusionFrom 2018 to 2021, EMS clinicians were increasingly exposed to death. This trend may be driven by COVID‐19 and its effects on the healthcare system and reinforces the need for evidence‐based death notification training to support EMS clinicians.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Emergency Medicine

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