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1 hom 14,083 (43.9%) received treatment by the emergency medical service.
2 of stroke symptoms, prompting action to call emergency medical services.
3     One large county with a single system of emergency medical services.
4 tnesses play a key role in patient access to emergency medical services.
5 tic medical shock treated by out-of-hospital emergency medical services.
6 D application by persons outside traditional emergency medical services.
7 ing and management of patients with STEMI by emergency medical services.
8 fore arrival in hospital after activation of emergency medical services.
9 8) being defibrillated before the arrival of emergency medical services.
10 st 10 years, particularly for patients using emergency medical services.
11 vention facility, including 640 arriving via emergency medical services, 267 self/family driven, and
12 atients) were longer than for patients using emergency medical services (76 versus 51 minutes; P<0.00
13                Only 81 patients (19%) called emergency medical services (911) to report symptoms befo
14 nutes or a PPCI facility </=120 minutes from emergency medical services activation.
15 -saving if it resulted in fewer overdoses or emergency medical service activations.
16 nity education; notification and response of emergency medical services; acute stroke treatment; suba
17 a prospective registry that was linked to an emergency medical services administrative database.
18                                              Emergency medical service administrators must critically
19                In our randomised trial of 46 emergency medical service agencies (serving 2.3 million
20 ly to be older, female, and treated by rural emergency medical services agencies and experienced long
21                  Nine hospitals served by 21 emergency medical services agencies in southwestern Penn
22  clinical trial involving 114 North American emergency medical services agencies within the Resuscita
23 taneous coronary intervention and at least 1 emergency medical service agency.
24 tation science in which each institution and emergency medical services agency will define an optimal
25        It was coordinated by the prehospital emergency medical service and encompassed the public eme
26 lving patient education, improvements in the Emergency Medical Services and emergency department comp
27 casional consideration within the manuals of emergency medical services and emergency department mana
28 ac arrest calls were audited and linked with emergency medical services and hospital outcome data.
29                                         From emergency medical services and other Parisian agencies,
30 t home: either the control response (calling emergency medical services and performing cardiopulmonar
31 ]) or the use of an AED, followed by calling emergency medical services and performing CPR.
32 lood pressure between the evaluations of the Emergency Medical Services and the emergency department
33                                   Helicopter emergency medical services and their possible effect on
34 fety policies, and improvements in access to emergency medical services and timely orthopaedic care a
35 Eligible patients were assessed by organized emergency medical services, and had field-based physiolo
36 lopments in public health insurance schemes, emergency medical services, and health information techn
37 and tertiary hospitals, a lack of integrated emergency medical services, and the medical community's
38 iac arrest is the home, a situation in which emergency medical services are challenged to provide tim
39 ucidation of which aspects of the helicopter emergency medical services are responsible for any salut
40 he association between time from 911 call to emergency medical service arrival (response time) and su
41                                    Time from emergency medical services arrival to ECG was longer for
42 ator (AED) locations registered with Toronto Emergency Medical Services as of September 2009 were plo
43  side of a timepoint at which the helicopter emergency medical services availability ceased, reached
44 e pulseless but received no resuscitation by emergency medical services between December 2005 and Mar
45 ified with cardiac arrest location data from emergency medical service cardiac arrest registries.
46 rom the King County (Washington) Division of Emergency Medical Services' Cardiac Arrest Database.
47 tor recordings for the first five minutes of emergency medical service cardiopulmonary resuscitation.
48 ries, their use for measuring the quality of emergency medical service care remains relatively unknow
49 romes (ACS) is important; causes of delay in emergency medical services care of ACS are poorly unders
50 ortunities for and barriers to regionalizing emergency medical services care of patients with shock.
51                                              Emergency medical services contact is mostly initiated b
52 ))-Get With the Guidelines() and a statewide emergency medical services data system from June 2008 to
53 ained information on these patients from the emergency-medical-services department or the hospitals t
54 <0.001), and emergency department bypass for emergency medical services direct presenters (48%-59%; P
55 an first medical contact-to-device times for emergency medical services direct presenters (84 versus
56  Departments (RACE) project, transported via emergency medical service directly to 21 North Carolina
57 randomized trial with crossover included 114 emergency medical service (EMS) agencies.
58                                The time from emergency medical service (EMS) arrival to administratio
59 est victims who receive bystander CPR before emergency medical service (EMS) arrival.
60  by examining the following: 1) citywide 911 emergency medical service (EMS) calls and ambulance resp
61 01, and December 31, 2009, in a metropolitan emergency medical service (EMS) system.
62  regular feedback for 484 hospitals and 1253 emergency medical services (EMS) agencies in 16 regions
63 ssions for bystander resuscitation; 2) a new emergency medical services (EMS) algorithm; and 3) aggre
64  by differences in coordinating care between emergency medical services (EMS) and hospitals.
65 ive patients with STEMI were assessed by the emergency medical services (EMS) and referred for primar
66  years who received resuscitative efforts by emergency medical services (EMS) and were enrolled in th
67 ther CPR was performed before the arrival of emergency medical services (EMS) and whether early CPR w
68 mpirical evidence suggests that people value emergency medical services (EMS) but that they may not u
69 emiology of pre-hospital severe sepsis among emergency medical services (EMS) encounters, relative to
70                                              Emergency medical services (EMS) hospital prenotificatio
71 nal defibrillators (AEDs) beyond traditional emergency medical services (EMS) into the community has
72                                Activation of emergency medical services (EMS) is critical for the ear
73 s simultaneous 12-lead ECG transmission from emergency medical services (EMS) personnel in the field
74                                              Emergency medical services (EMS) personnel often are not
75 aged 0-108 years) were assessed by organized emergency medical services (EMS) personnel, did not have
76 d cardiac arrests that were not witnessed by emergency medical services (EMS) personnel, the rate of
77                                              Emergency medical services (EMS) providers who administe
78     We review the incident reports logged by emergency medical services (EMS) technicians arriving wi
79     We review the incident reports logged by emergency medical services (EMS) technicians arriving wi
80 t of patients with chest pain transported by emergency medical services (EMS).
81 th out-of-hospital cardiac arrest treated by emergency medical services (EMS).
82 ality among injured patients served by 9-1-1 emergency medical services (EMS).
83 dia was 25% when the arrest was witnessed by emergency-medical-services (EMS) personnel, 35% when it
84 6.1 years for firefighters and 6.4 years for emergency-medical-services (EMS) workers.
85  of stroke patients arrived at hospitals via emergency medical services (EMSs), yet since then, there
86                                          All emergency medical services encounters with community acq
87                         Paramedics providing emergency medical services followed a protocol that incl
88                             Delay in calling emergency medical services following stroke limits acces
89                   A review of the history of emergency medical services for children and the framewor
90 es benefits accrued by the use of helicopter emergency medical services for trauma transport.
91  of subjects undergoing scene HEMS or ground emergency medical services (GEMS) in the National Trauma
92 ho would potentially benefit from helicopter emergency medical services (HEMS).
93 eased consideration of fibrinolytic therapy, emergency medical services hospital bypass protocols, an
94        Compared with waiting for traditional emergency medical services, immediate use of automated e
95 tential mass casualties and the provision of emergency medical services; implementation of strategies
96 valuating all patients with STEMI managed by emergency medical services in the greater Paris area (11
97   Compared with the pretriage period, use of emergency medical services increased from 30.2% to 38.1%
98                                Compared with emergency medical services-initiated CPR and resuscitati
99 udies are needed to evaluate the efficacy of Emergency Medical Services interventions to reduce this
100 on of its effectiveness compared with ground emergency medical services is warranted.
101 c countershock, heart arrest, resuscitation, emergency medical services; keywords: automatic external
102 meeting this challenge is the recognition by emergency medical service leaders that prehospital airwa
103 tratified case-crossover design using 11 677 emergency medical service-logged OHCA events between 200
104 cted, academically authoritative, grassroots emergency medical services medical directors and trauma
105 ional STEMI Alert Team, which, together with emergency medical services, offers support for thromboly
106 ality rates than the patients presenting via emergency medical services or who are self/family driven
107      Cardiac arrest data from Rochester, MN, emergency medical services over a 6-yr period was retros
108 distributions, key differences exist between emergency medical services patients with traumatic and n
109                                 Among 20,835 emergency medical services patients, 7,817 patients (43%
110 -to-balloon time was noticeably shorter when emergency medical service personnel requested prehospita
111 e by emergency department physicians than by emergency medical service personnel, but door-to-balloon
112  and those with cardiac arrests witnessed by emergency medical services personnel (n = 2253), leaving
113           In certain venues, out-of-hospital emergency medical services personnel are highly skilled
114                                              Emergency medical services personnel from agencies imple
115 schools and businesses; 2) retraining of all emergency medical services personnel in methods to enhan
116 matic external defibrillation) and timing of emergency medical services personnel on OHCA outcomes ac
117               For successful implementation, emergency medical services personnel should be involved
118 ons for management from the first contact by emergency medical services personnel through initial adm
119  3 objective criteria (OHCA not witnessed by emergency medical services personnel, nonshockable initi
120 ac cause of arrest that was not witnessed by emergency medical services personnel.
121 ble, 25.8% were transported to a hospital by emergency-medical-service personnel, 8.6% were admitted,
122 atient care with additional data provided by emergency medical services, police departments and surro
123 atient care with additional data provided by emergency medical services, police departments and surro
124 increased from 30.2% to 38.1% (P < .001) and emergency medical services prenotification increased fro
125 prespecified adjustment for mode of arrival, emergency medical services prenotification, and onset-to
126 rrest were abstracted from data collected by emergency medical service programs in Seattle and King C
127                                      Current Emergency Medical Service protocols rely on provider-dir
128 complications of pediatric trauma affect the emergency medical services provider, emergency physician
129 pulmonary resuscitation or defibrillation by emergency medical service providers and/or received byst
130 n the equipment, training, and experience of Emergency Medical Services providers in the care of chil
131  20 years with OOH cardiac arrest treated by emergency medical services providers participating in th
132  to describe chest compression rates used by emergency medical services providers to resuscitate pati
133 n imaging suite, and prompt data feedback to emergency medical services providers were used less freq
134 f drowning research, resuscitation research, emergency medical services, public health, and developme
135 tion, the development of biomedical devices, emergency medical services quality assurance, and clinic
136 Epistry-Cardiac Arrest is a population-based emergency medical services registry of out-of-hospital n
137 e audio and written dispatch report, written emergency medical services report, hospital record, and
138  years, P<0.005) and to have presented after emergency medical services rerouting in July 2005 (96% v
139 ociation may have important implications for emergency medical services resource allocation.
140  importance of assessing the distribution of emergency medical services resources to make the trauma
141  25-35 years of age) of OHCA were treated by emergency medical services responders, for an overall in
142 ously hypothesized factors such as delays in emergency medical service response or differences in the
143 dy took place in a community with a 2-tiered emergency medical services response and an established s
144 logistic regression accounting for age, sex, emergency medical services response time, clustering of
145 itation, first monitored cardiac rhythm, and emergency medical services response time, compared with
146                               Optimizing the emergency medical services' response or increasing PPCI
147 s shed light on the specific problems in the emergency medical service setting.
148                             However, whether emergency medical services should bypass nonpercutaneous
149              Taking the patient to CT on the emergency medical services stretcher, registering the pa
150 s to bring the patient directly to CT on the emergency medical services stretcher.
151  the methodology and findings of a statewide emergency medical service surveillance initiative, which
152 -witnessed, shockable rhythm as a measure of emergency medical services system efficacy and all emerg
153 flected consensus on the need to account for emergency medical services system factors, increasing av
154                              Reliance on the Emergency Medical Services system is insufficient to ass
155                                          Our emergency medical services system made significant chang
156 ncy medical services system efficacy and all emergency medical services system-treated arrests as a m
157 w of cardiac arrest data from a large, urban emergency medical services system.
158 s should be adopted as metrics against which emergency medical services systems can measure their per
159  Data collected on patients' encounters with emergency medical services systems should include descri
160 -hospital cardiac arrest patients in 2 urban emergency medical services systems were treated with aut
161 a structured framework with which to compare emergency medical services systems.
162 ey should take, the importance of contacting emergency medical services, the need to report to an app
163 cs of collaborative efforts by hospitals and emergency medical services to provide timely reperfusion
164 opulmonary resuscitation were transported by emergency medical services to the CCL.
165                 We assessed the adherence of emergency medical services to this STEMI protocol, as we
166  ST-segment-elevation myocardial infarction, emergency medical service transport from the field direc
167 rdiology group competition (n = 81, 21%) and emergency medical services transport and finances (n = 9
168 xty-two (86%) of 72 transported patients met emergency medical services transport criteria.
169 nce supports an argument that the helicopter emergency medical services transport is associated with
170                                        Total emergency medical services transport time increased by l
171 y at referral and nonreferral hospitals, and emergency medical services transport times.
172  female sex, off-hours presentation, and non-emergency medical services transport to the first hospit
173 orrhage, 22 patients (22%) showed PND during Emergency Medical Services transport, with a mean decrea
174                                              Emergency medical services transportation to the hospita
175 atients with intracerebral hemorrhage during Emergency Medical Services transportation to the hospita
176                                              Emergency medical service transported 1401 (83.0%) patie
177                                              Emergency medical services-transported patients were mos
178 bsolute number and utilization of Helicopter Emergency Medical Services transports has occurred in th
179                                   We studied emergency medical services treated out-of-hospital cardi
180 e investigation was a retrospective study of emergency medical service-treated, nontraumatic, out-of-
181 d]) of consecutive adults with nontraumatic, emergency medical services-treated out-of-hospital cardi
182                                   We studied emergency medical services-treated out-of-hospital cardi
183 re from bystander resuscitation to statutory emergency medical services treatment and transfer.
184 ency Care), a randomized controlled trial of emergency medical services treatment of people with symp
185  the closely related issue of the helicopter emergency medical services triage appropriateness.
186  arrest and were given CPR by 15 prehospital emergency medical service units.
187 cago resulted in significant improvements in emergency medical services use and prenotification and m
188 essed the association between the helicopter emergency medical services utilization and trauma outcom
189     Recent studies addressing the helicopter emergency medical services utilization in terms of triag
190  Scale score ascertained at the scene by the Emergency Medical Services was compared with the subsequ
191 a short delay between pain onset and call to emergency medical services were the main predictors of S
192 diac causes between 2006 and 2012, excluding emergency medical service-witnessed arrests.

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