Unveiling paramedic confidence: exploring paramedics' perceived confidence in out-of-hospital births and obstetric emergencies - a scoping review.

IF 2 4区 医学 Q3 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Rural and remote health Pub Date : 2025-06-01 Epub Date: 2025-06-04 DOI:10.22605/RRH9260
Larissa Martin, Chloe Betts
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Introduction: The centralisation of birthing care, driven by the closure of 225 of Australia's rural birthing centres over the past 20 years, has resulted in a 47% increase in births before arrivals at hospitals. This shift positions paramedics as critical primary health providers for out-of-hospital births and obstetric emergencies. Despite the infrequency of such emergencies for paramedics, they demand proficient clinical management due to their severity and potential complications. Confidence is vital for paramedics in managing high-risk obstetric emergencies effectively. However, there is limited research on paramedics' confidence levels and the factors influencing them, particularly in Australia following the introduction of paramedic registration and mandatory obstetric training in 2018. This scoping review seeks to explore paramedics' confidence in managing prehospital obstetric emergencies, identify influencing factors and examine the implications of confidence on both patient and paramedic welfare.

Methods: Following Joanna Briggs Institute methodology, a comprehensive literature search across three databases yielded 125 results. Screening of titles and abstracts by two authors, followed by full-text screening of 18 remaining articles, was conducted. Conflicts were resolved by the primary author, and three additional relevant articles were retrieved manually. Thirteen studies met the inclusion criteria and were analysed to inform the review.

Results: The findings consistently highlighted feelings of low confidence, insecurity, vulnerability and heightened stress among paramedics when confronted with prehospital obstetric emergencies. These were largely attributed to infrequent and inadequate education and training, leading to skills decay and difficulties in distinguishing normal from complicated obstetric events. Rurality due to various logistical, geographical and resourcing factors was found to exacerbate paramedic insecurity attending and managing obstetric emergencies. The decline in confidence not only affects clinical proficiency but also poses risks to patient safety and contributes to paramedic stress and poor mental health outcomes.

Conclusion: Proportional confidence emerges as a crucial factor in medical education, facilitating enhanced clinical competence and better mental health outcomes for patients, clinicians and teams. This is of increased importance in rural areas where logistical barriers to ensuring appropriate care are prevalent. Further research is needed to ascertain the optimal frequency and type of training/education required to bolster paramedic confidence in managing obstetric emergencies effectively.

揭开护理人员的信心:探索护理人员对院外分娩和产科急诊的感知信心-范围审查。
导言:在过去的20年里,由于关闭了澳大利亚的225个农村分娩中心,分娩护理的集中化导致在到达医院之前分娩的人数增加了47%。这种转变使护理人员成为院外分娩和产科急诊的关键初级保健提供者。尽管这种紧急情况对护理人员来说并不常见,但由于其严重性和潜在的并发症,他们需要熟练的临床管理。信心对护理人员有效管理高危产科急诊至关重要。然而,关于护理人员信心水平及其影响因素的研究有限,特别是在2018年引入护理人员注册和强制性产科培训之后的澳大利亚。这个范围审查旨在探讨护理人员的信心管理院前产科急诊,确定影响因素,并检查信心对病人和护理人员福利的影响。方法:遵循乔安娜布里格斯研究所的方法,在三个数据库中进行全面的文献检索,得到125个结果。对两位作者的标题和摘要进行筛选,然后对其余18篇文章进行全文筛选。冲突由主要作者解决,另外三篇相关文章被手动检索。13项研究符合纳入标准,并进行了分析,为评价提供信息。结果:研究结果一致强调了护理人员在面对院前产科紧急情况时的低信心、不安全感、脆弱性和高度压力。这主要是由于教育和培训不经常和不充分,导致技能衰退和难以区分正常和复杂的产科事件。由于各种后勤、地理和资源因素,农村状况加剧了护理人员参加和管理产科急诊的不安全状况。信心的下降不仅影响临床熟练程度,而且对患者安全构成风险,并导致护理人员压力和不良心理健康结果。结论:比例自信成为医学教育的关键因素,有助于提高临床能力,改善患者、临床医生和团队的心理健康状况。这在农村地区尤为重要,因为在确保适当护理方面普遍存在后勤障碍。需要进一步研究,以确定提高护理人员对有效管理产科急诊的信心所需的培训/教育的最佳频率和类型。
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来源期刊
Rural and remote health
Rural and remote health Rural Health-
CiteScore
2.00
自引率
9.50%
发文量
145
审稿时长
8 weeks
期刊介绍: Rural and Remote Health is a not-for-profit, online-only, peer-reviewed academic publication. It aims to further rural and remote health education, research and practice. The primary purpose of the Journal is to publish and so provide an international knowledge-base of peer-reviewed material from rural health practitioners (medical, nursing and allied health professionals and health workers), educators, researchers and policy makers.
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