澳大利亚农村志愿救护人员的院外分娩培训、经验和信心。

IF 2 4区 医学 Q3 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Rural and remote health Pub Date : 2024-07-01 Epub Date: 2024-07-31 DOI:10.22605/RRH8788
Michella G Hill, Belinda Flanagan, Sara Hansen, Luke Hopper, Brennen Mills
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引用次数: 0

摘要

导言:计划外院外分娩占救护车求助的比例不到 1%。然而,这些出诊很有可能出现危及生命的并发症,尤其是在农村或偏远地区,专科护理支持有限,情况尤为复杂。许多社区医院不再提供产科护理,因此新生儿父母必须前往较大的地区或大都市医院寻求帮助。旅行时间的增加可能会增加计划外院外分娩和/或并发症的风险,如产后出血和新生儿死亡。农村志愿救护人员(VAOs)是澳大利亚医疗保健系统不可或缺的组成部分,尤其是在地区和偏远地区。尽管与其他病例类型的呼叫相比,志愿救护人员对计划外院外分娩的响应可能被认为是罕见的,但在这些潜在的高风险情况下,提供充分的护理是至关重要的。本研究调查了澳大利亚农村地区退伍军人组织对其培训、经验和信心的看法,这些培训、经验和信心涉及需要救护车协助的计划外院外分娩和计划内家庭分娩产科急症:2021 年末至 2023 年中,通过电话或在线视频会议进行了半结构化访谈和焦点小组讨论。会议进行了录音和逐字记录。采用布劳恩和克拉克的语义编码和反思性主题分析六步法对数据进行分析和主题编码:对来自澳大利亚六个州和地区的 28 名参与者进行了访谈,他们都在澳大利亚农村和偏远地区工作。10 名参与者为男性,17 名为女性,1 名为男性相邻者,他们的退伍军人经验从 3 个月到 29 年不等。分析得出了四个主题:(1)缺乏教育和分娩经验导致信心不足。大多数参与者表示在产科出诊时非常焦虑,并解释说特定产科和新生儿技能使用不足意味着技能衰减是一个问题;(2)讨论了关于救护员执业范围和获取分娩和新生儿所需的医疗设备的限制,这可能会影响病人护理;(3)讨论了后勤和沟通方面的困难。由于距离明确的护理地点较远,紧急情况下的后备人员可能有限,以及可能无法进行空中医疗检索,这些都增加了病例的复杂性。电信 "黑洞 "使需要高级临床医生支持的退伍军人进一步感到孤立无援;(4)有一种看法是,许多公众不知道退伍军人经常为当地救护车配备人员,并期望退伍军人拥有与注册辅助医务人员相同的执业范围。此外,在紧急情况下,退伍军人可以为朋友和家人提供服务,这可能会造成心理创伤:退伍军人报告称,他们在处理院外意外分娩和产科急诊时感到不自在,认为自己处理并发症的能力有限。注册辅助医务人员的支持取决于是否有空,而在农村地区,在线临床建议和支持的电信技术并不总是可靠的。考虑到澳大利亚地区距离明确的医疗机构较远,这对患者安全造成了严重影响。为了降低院外分娩的风险,继续开展辅助医务人员教育至关重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Out-of-hospital birth training, experience and confidence of Australian rural volunteer ambulance officers.

Introduction: Unplanned out-of-hospital births represent less than 1% of ambulance requests for assistance. However, these call-outs have a high risk of life-threatening complications, which are particularly complex in rural or remote settings with limited accessibility to specialist care support. Many community hospitals no longer provide obstetrics care, so birth parents must travel to larger regional or metropolitan hospitals for assistance. Increased travel time may increase the risk of unplanned out-of-hospital birth and/or complications such as postpartum haemorrhage and neonatal mortality. Rural volunteer ambulance officers (VAOs) are an integral component of Australia's healthcare system, especially in regional and remote areas. Although VAO response to unplanned out-of-hospital births may be considered rare compared to calls to other case types, provision of adequate care is paramount in these potentially high-risk situations. This research investigates Australian rural VAOs' perceptions of their training, experience and confidence regarding unplanned out-of-hospital birth and planned homebirth with obstetric emergencies where ambulance assistance is required.

Methods: Semi-structured interviews and focus groups were undertaken from late 2021 to mid-2023 via telephone or online videoconference. Sessions were audio-recorded and transcribed verbatim. Data were analysed and coded into themes using Braun and Clarke's six-step process for semantic coding and reflexive thematic analysis.

Results: Twenty-eight participants were interviewed from six Australian states and territories, all of whom worked in rural and remote Australia. Ten participants were male, 17 female and one was male-adjacent, with length of VAO experience ranging from 3 months to 29 years. Participants came from seven jurisdictional ambulance services.| Four themes emerged from analysis: (1) Lack of education and exposure to birth resulted in low confidence. Most participants reported significant anxiety attending obstetric call-outs, and explained under-utilisation of specific obstetric and neonatal skills meant skills decay was an issue; (2) limitations were discussed regarding VAO scope of practice and accessing medical equipment specifically required for birthing and neonates that could impact patient care; (3) logistical and communication difficulties were discussed. Long distances to definitive care, potentially limited backup during emergencies and potential unavailability of aeromedical retrieval increased perceived complexity of cases. Telecommunication 'black holes' created a sense of further isolation for VAOs requiring support from senior clinicians; (4) there was a perception that many members of the general public were unaware VAOs often staffed the local ambulance, and expected VAOs to have the same scope of practice as a registered paramedic. Furthermore, VAOs can attend friends and family in an emergency, potentially creating psychological trauma.

Conclusion: VAOs report being uncomfortable attending unplanned out-of-hospital births and obstetric emergencies, perceiving they have limited ability to manage complications. Backup from a registered paramedic is dependent on availability, and telecommunications are not always reliable in rural areas for online clinical advice and support. Given the distances to definitive care in regional Australia, this has serious implications for patient safety. Continued VAO education is essential for risk reduction in out-of-hospital births.

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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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