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Pre-hospital ambulance care of patients following a suspected seizure: a cross sectional study

journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-01, 10:38 authored by Jon M. Dickson, Zahid AsgharZahid Asghar, Niro Siriwardena

Purpose: We aimed to investigate the characteristics of patients presenting to the ambulance service with suspected seizures, the costs of managing these patients and the factors which predicted transport to hospital.Methods: We employed a cross-sectional design using routine clinical data from a UK regional ambulance service. Logistic regression was used to identify predictors of transport to hospital from ambulance response times, demographics, clinical (physiological) findings and treatments.Results: There were 177,715 emergency incidents recorded in 2011/12 of which 2.9% (5139/177,715) were classified as seizures by ambulance call handlers and 2.7% (4884/177,715) by paramedics on the scene. Suspected seizures were the seventh most common call type. The annual cost of managing these incidents was £890,148. Clinical and physiological variables were normal for most patients. 59.3% (2894/4884) of patients were transported to hospital. 1/4884 (0.02%) patient died. Administration of diazepam, insertion of an airway and pyrexia perfectly predicted transport to hospital, tachycardia had a modest association, but other variables were only weak predictors of transport to hospital.Conclusions: This study shows that most patients after a suspected seizure are not acutely unwell but nevertheless most patients are transported to hospital. Further research is required to determine which factors are important in decisions to transport to hospital and to create evidence-based tools to help paramedics identify patients who could be safely managed without transport to hospital.

History

School affiliated with

  • School of Health and Social Care (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Seizure

Volume

57

Pages/Article Number

38-44

Publisher

Elsevier for British Epilepsy Association Epilepsy Action

ISSN

1059-1311

Date Submitted

2018-04-10

Date Accepted

2018-03-07

Date of First Publication

2018-03-08

Date of Final Publication

2018-04-30

Date Document First Uploaded

2018-03-18

ePrints ID

31381

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