2016
DOI: 10.1016/j.annemergmed.2015.07.021
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Pediatric Intubation by Paramedics in a Large Emergency Medical Services System: Process, Challenges, and Outcomes

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Cited by 34 publications
(33 citation statements)
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“…To the Editor: Our colleagues in King County recently reported on their experience with pediatric intubation (patients <13 years) by paramedics, including use of rapid sequence intubation. 1 This is in stark contrast to practice patterns in our own regions, where pediatric intubation in general (or pediatric rapid sequence intubation in North Carolina) is not part of the current emergency medical services (EMS) scopes of practice. In accordance with the available literature, including a large, randomized, controlled, out-of-hospital trial, 2 we believe the burden of proof for the EMS medical director should be to demonstrate above-average intubation performance and outcomes.…”
Section: Safety Of Pediatric Out-of-hospital Rapid Sequence Intubatiomentioning
confidence: 84%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…To the Editor: Our colleagues in King County recently reported on their experience with pediatric intubation (patients <13 years) by paramedics, including use of rapid sequence intubation. 1 This is in stark contrast to practice patterns in our own regions, where pediatric intubation in general (or pediatric rapid sequence intubation in North Carolina) is not part of the current emergency medical services (EMS) scopes of practice. In accordance with the available literature, including a large, randomized, controlled, out-of-hospital trial, 2 we believe the burden of proof for the EMS medical director should be to demonstrate above-average intubation performance and outcomes.…”
Section: Safety Of Pediatric Out-of-hospital Rapid Sequence Intubatiomentioning
confidence: 84%
“…The 66% first-pass success rate (75% with rapid sequence intubation) from the current experience compares favorably with published first-pass success in the pediatric emergency department (52% to 71%) and the pediatric ICU (62%). [1][2][3] Thus, the informed approach would proceed with intubation in the out-of-hospital setting rather than delay definitive airway care for upwards of 30 minutes, given our system's geospatial distribution.…”
Section: In Replymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…39 We focused on TIs performed in the tertiary hospital setting, and these findings cannot be extrapolated to early TI by other providers including emergency medical service providers, where other challenges may be met. 15 We also recognize that the findings of a single-center with a limited PICU population would require validation from larger, multicentre studies or registries. Given the wide confidence intervals in our limited sample size, large studies are required to confirm the lack of association between the timing of TI and mortality.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[11][12][13][14] In settings where paramedics are trained to perform prehospital TI, challenges and complications have also been reported. 15,16 Adverse TI associated events and oxygen desaturations are associated with prolonged MV, while severe adverse events are associated with greater mortality in the pediatric intensive care unit (PICU). 17 In fact, critically ill patients are at greater risk for these adverse events compared to relatively well patients who undergo elective TI.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Emergency physicians have the advantage of concentrating these relatively rare procedures among a smaller group of providers compared to many EMS systems. In some EMS systems paramedics intubate a child once every 5–10 years, while in other systems where critical procedures are concentrated among a smaller group of providers, pediatric intubations happen once every 2–3 years for an individual medic 1,2. Increased exposure to these critical procedures in practice likely enhances skill retention and promotes safety and efficacy 3…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%