首页> 外文OA文献 >Support and assessment for fall emergency referrals (SAFER) 2: A cluster randomised trial and systematic review of clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of new protocols for emergency ambulance paramedics to assess older people following a fall with referral to community-based care when appropriate
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Support and assessment for fall emergency referrals (SAFER) 2: A cluster randomised trial and systematic review of clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of new protocols for emergency ambulance paramedics to assess older people following a fall with referral to community-based care when appropriate

机译:秋季紧急转诊的支持和评估(saFER)2:一项集群随机试验和系统评估临床效果和成本效益的新紧急救护人员医疗协议,以评估老年人跌倒后适当时转诊到社区护理

摘要

Background: Emergency calls are frequently made to ambulance services for older people who have fallen, but ambulance crews often leave patients at the scene without any ongoing care. We evaluated a new clinical protocol which allowed paramedics to assess older people who had fallen and, if appropriate, refer them to community-based falls services. Objectives: To compare outcomes, processes and costs of care between intervention and control groups; and to understand factors which facilitate or hinder use. Design: Cluster randomised controlled trial. Participants: Participating paramedics at three ambulance services in England and Wales were based at stations randomised to intervention or control arms. Participants were aged 65 years and over, attended by a study paramedic for a fall-related emergency service call, and resident in the trial catchment areas. Interventions: Intervention paramedics received a clinical protocol with referral pathway, training and support to change practice. Control paramedics continued practice as normal. Outcomes: The primary outcome comprised subsequent emergency health-care contacts (emergency admissions, emergency department attendances, emergency service calls) or death at 1 month and 6 months. Secondary outcomes included pathway of care, ambulance service operational indicators, self-reported outcomes and costs of care. Those assessing outcomes remained blinded to group allocation. Results: Across sites, 3073 eligible patients attended by 105 paramedics from 14 ambulance stations were randomly allocated to the intervention group, and 2841 eligible patients attended by 110 paramedics from 11 stations were randomly allocated to the control group. After excluding dissenting and unmatched patients, 2391 intervention group patients and 2264 control group patients were included in primary outcome analyses. We did not find an effect on our overall primary outcome at 1 month or 6 months. However, further emergency service calls were reduced at both 1 month and 6 months; a smaller proportion of patients had made further emergency service calls at 1 month (18.5% vs. 21.8%) and the rate per patient-day at risk at 6 months was lower in the intervention group (0.013 vs. 0.017). Rate of conveyance to emergency department at index incident was similar between groups. Eight per cent of trial eligible patients in the intervention arm were referred to falls services by attending paramedics, compared with 1% in the control arm. The proportion of patients left at scene without further care was lower in the intervention group than in the control group (22.6% vs. 30.3%). We found no differences in duration of episode of care or job cycle. No adverse events were reported. Mean cost of the intervention was £17.30 per patient. There were no significant differences in mean resource utilisation, utilities at 1 month or 6 months or quality-adjusted life-years. In total, 58 patients, 25 paramedics and 31 stakeholders participated in focus groups or interviews. Patients were very satisfied with assessments carried out by paramedics. Paramedics reported that the intervention had increased their confidence to leave patients at home, but barriers to referral included patients’ social situations and autonomy. Conclusions: Findings indicate that this new pathway may be introduced by ambulance services at modest cost, without risk of harm and with some reductions in further emergency calls. However, we did not find evidence of improved health outcomes or reductions in overall NHS emergency workload. Further research is necessary to understand issues in implementation, the costs and benefits of e-trials and the performance of the modified Falls Efficacy Scale.
机译:背景:坠落的老年人经常拨打急救电话到救护车上,但是救护人员经常将患者留在现场,而没有任何持续的护理。我们评估了一项新的临床方案,该方案允许护理人员评估跌倒的老年人,并在适当时将其转介至社区的跌倒服务。目标:比较干预组和对照组之间的结果,过程和护理费用;并了解促进或阻碍使用的因素。设计:分组随机对照试验。参与者:英格兰和威尔士的三个救护车服务站的参与护理人员均设在随机分配给干预或控制部门的站点。参加者年龄在65岁以上,并由研究护理人员参加了与秋季相关的紧急服务电话,并且居住在试验集水区。干预措施:干预护理人员收到了临床方案,包括转诊途径,培训和支持以改变实践。控制护理人员照常继续练习。结果:主要结果包括随后的紧急医疗保健联系(紧急入院,急诊部门出勤,紧急服务电话)或在1个月和6个月时死亡。次要结果包括护理途径,救护车操作指标,自我报告的结果和护理费用。那些评估结果的人仍然看不到组分配。结果:跨地点,将来自14个救护站的105名护理人员的3073名合格患者随机分配至干预组,将来自11个站的110名护理人员的2841名合格患者随机分配至对照组。在排除异议和不匹配的患者后,将2391例干预组患者和2264例对照组患者纳入主要结局分析。在1个月或6个月时,我们没有发现对总体总体结局有影响。但是,分别在1个月和6个月减少了更多的紧急服务电话;干预组中有较小比例的患者在1个月进行了进一步的急救服务(18.5%对21.8%),而在6个月时每患者每天发生风险的比率较低(0.013对0.017)。各组间指标事件发生时急诊科的运送率相似。干预组中有8%的试验合格患者通过护理人员转诊跌倒服务,而对照组中则为1%。干预组留在现场而无需进一步护理的患者比例低于对照组(22.6%比30.3%)。我们发现护理或工作周期的持续时间没有差异。没有不良反应的报道。干预的平均成本为每位患者17.30英镑。平均资源利用率,1个月或6个月的效用或质量调整的生命年没有显着差异。共有58位患者,25位护理人员和31位利益相关者参加了焦点小组或访谈。患者对医护人员的评估非常满意。医护人员报告说,该干预措施增加了他们将患者留在家中的信心,但转诊的障碍包括患者的社交情况和自主权。结论:研究结果表明,救护车服务可以以较低的成本引入这一新途径,而没有造成伤害的风险,并且可以减少进一步的紧急呼叫。但是,我们没有找到改善健康结果或减少整体NHS紧急工作量的证据。有必要进行进一步的研究,以了解实施中的问题,电子审判的成本和收益以及改良后的瀑布效能量表的性能。

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