Advanced training for ambulance crews: implications from 403 consecutive patients with cardiac arrest managed by crews with simple training.
- 28 November 1987
- Vol. 295 (6610), 1387-1389
- https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.295.6610.1387
Abstract
Sixty seven ambulance staff in Nottinghamshire completed a simple extended training programme in managing cardiac arrest and using a defibrillator. This enabled around one third of the ambulance emergency shifts to be manned by such a crew, with a defibrillator as part of their standard equipment. Forty four of 403 consecutive patients who suffered cardiac arrest in the community were managed by these crews and survived to leave hospital. The training programme does not include endotracheal intubation, intravenous infusion, or drug administration. The new official advanced training course for ambulance crews, which includes these skills, is inappropriate in its methods and may delay widespread introduction of emergency ambulances equipped with defibrillators.This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
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