Physician in-field observation of prehospital advanced life support personnel: a statewide evaluation.

TitlePhysician in-field observation of prehospital advanced life support personnel: a statewide evaluation.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication1993
AuthorsSpaite DW, Valenzuela TD, Meislin HW
JournalPrehosp Disaster Med
Volume8
Issue4
Pagination299-302
Date Published1993 Oct-Dec
ISSN Number1049-023X
KeywordsArizona, Emergency Service, Hospital, Humans, Life Support Care, Physician's Role, Quality Assurance, Health Care, Remote Consultation
Abstract

STUDY HYPOTHESIS: Direct physician observation of advanced life support (ALS) personnel is rare in a demographically diverse state.

STUDY POPULATION: Twenty ALS agencies from throughout Arizona.

METHODS: A board-certified emergency physician performed on-site interviews with the emergency medical services (EMS) supervisor of each agency to approximate the number of days per year that physicians observe ALS personnel in the field.

RESULTS: Only 11 agencies (55%) reported that physicians ever observed ALS personnel. Among all agencies, an estimated total of 84 observer-days occurred per year. The agencies staffed a total of 86 ALS units, resulting in an estimated 0.98 observer-days/unit/year (84/86). On the average, it took 3.4 ALS personnel to staff a given unit over time and the probability that an ALS provider would be on a unit on any given day was 0.29 (1/3.4). The probability of a given provider being observed during one year was approximately 0.29 (0.98 x 0.29). Thus, on the average, an ALS provider would be observed by a physician approximately once every 3.5 years (1/0.29). Among urban agencies, the "average" ALS provider would be observed once every 2.9 years. This compared to a likelihood of in-field observation of only once every 6.7 years for non-urban providers (p = .036).

CONCLUSIONS: The skills of ALS providers in Arizona are observed by a physician in the field very infrequently. Although an uncommon occurrence in urban agencies, observation of non-urban ALS personnel occurs even less frequently. In addition, nearly one-half of the agencies surveyed never had a physician-observer. Although a variety of skills evaluation methods exist, it remains unclear whether any method is as useful as direct observation. Future investigations are needed to evaluate whether in-field physician observation impacts skills, patient care, or outcome in EMS systems.

Alternate JournalPrehosp Disaster Med
PubMed ID10155471
Faculty Reference: 
Harvey W. Meislin, MD, FACEP, FAAEM
Daniel W. Spaite, MD
Terence Valenzuela, MD, MPH