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Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Research Protocols

Date Submitted: Apr 12, 2019
Open Peer Review Period: Apr 23, 2019 - May 7, 2019
Date Accepted: Sep 24, 2019
(closed for review but you can still tweet)

The final, peer-reviewed published version of this preprint can be found here:

Evaluation of a Rural Emergency Medical Service Project in Germany: Protocol for a Multimethod and Multiperspective Longitudinal Analysis

Metelmann C, Metelmann B, Kohnen D, Prasser C, Süss R, Kuntosch J, Scheer D, Laslo T, Fischer L, Hasebrook J, Flessa S, Hahnenkamp K, Brinkrolf P

Evaluation of a Rural Emergency Medical Service Project in Germany: Protocol for a Multimethod and Multiperspective Longitudinal Analysis

JMIR Res Protoc 2020;9(2):e14358

DOI: 10.2196/14358

PMID: 32130193

PMCID: 7055856

Warning: This is an author submission that is not peer-reviewed or edited. Preprints - unless they show as "accepted" - should not be relied on to guide clinical practice or health-related behavior and should not be reported in news media as established information.

Evaluation of a Rural Emergency Medical Service Project in Germany: Protocol for a Multimethod and Multiperspective Longitudinal Analysis

  • Camilla Metelmann; 
  • Bibiana Metelmann; 
  • Dorothea Kohnen; 
  • Clara Prasser; 
  • Rebekka Süss; 
  • Julia Kuntosch; 
  • Dirk Scheer; 
  • Timm Laslo; 
  • Lutz Fischer; 
  • Joachim Hasebrook; 
  • Steffen Flessa; 
  • Klaus Hahnenkamp; 
  • Peter Brinkrolf

Background:

German emergency medical services are a 2-tiered system with paramedic-staffed ambulances as the primary response, supported by prehospital emergency doctors for life-threatening conditions. As in all European health care systems, German medical practitioners are in short supply, whereas the demand for timely emergency medical care is constantly growing. In rural areas, this has led to critical delays in the provision of emergency medical care. In particular, in cases of cardiac arrest, time is of the essence because, with each passing minute, the chance of survival with good neurological outcome decreases.

Objective:

The project has 4 main objectives: (1) reduce the therapy-free interval through widespread reinforcement of resuscitation skills and motivating the public to provide help (ie, bystander cardiopulmonary resuscitation), (2) provide faster professional first aid in addition to rescue services through alerting trained first aiders by mobile phone, (3) make more emergency physicians available more quickly through introducing the tele-emergency physician system, and (4) enhance emergency care through improving the cooperation between statutory health insurance on-call medical services (German: Kassenärztlicher Bereitschaftsdienst) and emergency medical services.

Methods:

We will evaluate project implementation in a tripartite prospective and intervention study. First, in medical evaluation, we will assess the influences of various project measures on quality of care using multiple methods. Second, the economic evaluation will mainly focus on the valuation of inputs and outcomes of the different measures while considering various relevant indicators. Third, as part of the work and organizational analysis, we will assess important work- and occupational-related parameters, as well as network and regional indexes.

Results:

We started the project in 2017 and will complete enrollment in 2020. We finished the preanalysis phase in September 2018.

Conclusions:

Overall, implementation of the project will entail realigning emergency medicine in rural areas and enhancing the quality of medical emergency care in the long term. We expect the project to lead to a measurable increase in medical laypersons’ individual motivation to provide resuscitation, to strengthen resuscitation skills, and to result in medical laypersons providing first aid much more frequently. Furthermore, we intend the project to decrease the therapy-free interval in cases of cardiac arrest by dispatching first aiders via mobile phones. Previous projects in urban regions have shown that the tele-emergency physician system can provide a higher availability and quality of emergency call-outs in regular health care. We expect a closer interrelation of emergency practices of statutory health insurance physicians with the rescue service to lead to better coordination of rescue and on-call services.

International Registered Report:

DERR1-10.2196/14358


 Citation

Please cite as:

Metelmann C, Metelmann B, Kohnen D, Prasser C, Süss R, Kuntosch J, Scheer D, Laslo T, Fischer L, Hasebrook J, Flessa S, Hahnenkamp K, Brinkrolf P

Evaluation of a Rural Emergency Medical Service Project in Germany: Protocol for a Multimethod and Multiperspective Longitudinal Analysis

JMIR Res Protoc 2020;9(2):e14358

DOI: 10.2196/14358

PMID: 32130193

PMCID: 7055856

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