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[Stocked Medications in Emergency Medical Service Vehicles Staffed by Physicians-is Prehospital Treatment According to Current Guidelines Possible?]

Overview
Journal Notf Rett Med
Publisher Springer
Specialty Emergency Medicine
Date 2022 May 18
PMID 35582148
Authors
Affiliations
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Abstract

Background: High quality of care in prehospital emergency medicine is characterized by guideline-based therapy. The basic prerequisite for this therapy is the availability of the required drugs in accordance with the current guideline recommendations. It is currently unclear whether this is guaranteed nationwide. There is no uniform standard regarding which drugs must be stocked in emergency medical services (EMS) vehicles staffed by physicians in Germany. The aim of the present study is to identify important diagnoses and the drugs required for their therapy. In a second step, medical directors throughout Germany were interviewed about current drugs available in their physician-staffed EMS vehicles and these were compared with the previously defined diagnosis-dependent drug lists.

Materials And Methods: After a structured guideline search, tracer diagnoses were defined and relevant drugs were assigned to them. The levels of evidence and recommendations were also considered. In a second step, this was compared with the current drugs available in physician-staffed EMS vehicles.

Results: A total of 156 different medications were identified. The median number of medications stocked was 58; the minimum number of medications stocked was 35 at one site, while multiple sites stocked a maximum of 77 medications .

Discussion: The present study investigated stocked medications in physician-staffed EMS vehicles. Overall, compared to a 2011 study, drug availability has improved. Most of the recommended medications are available in physician-staffed vehicles in Germany. The data from this study can be used by EMS throughout Germany to evaluate their preparedness.

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Haske D, Eppler F, Heinemann N, Schempf B BMC Emerg Med. 2023; 23(1):130.

PMID: 37924027 PMC: 10625244. DOI: 10.1186/s12873-023-00898-4.

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