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Perceptions and Barriers to Administering Vasopressors in the Prehospital Setting

Introduction Vasopressor administration is a critical medical intervention for patients with hypotension in undifferentiated shock states. Over the years, prehospital care has advanced with protocols and training that allow paramedics in the field to administer a variety of vasopressors. The primary...

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Autores principales: Quinn, Eric, Su, John, Fei, Lorraine, Liu, Joseph, Friedman, Matt, Lobel, David, Kabiriti, Sarah, Likourezos, Antonios, Motov, Sergey, Eng, David
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cureus 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9603066/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36321024
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.29614
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author Quinn, Eric
Su, John
Fei, Lorraine
Liu, Joseph
Friedman, Matt
Lobel, David
Kabiriti, Sarah
Likourezos, Antonios
Motov, Sergey
Eng, David
author_facet Quinn, Eric
Su, John
Fei, Lorraine
Liu, Joseph
Friedman, Matt
Lobel, David
Kabiriti, Sarah
Likourezos, Antonios
Motov, Sergey
Eng, David
author_sort Quinn, Eric
collection PubMed
description Introduction Vasopressor administration is a critical medical intervention for patients with hypotension in undifferentiated shock states. Over the years, prehospital care has advanced with protocols and training that allow paramedics in the field to administer a variety of vasopressors. The primary objective of this investigation was to evaluate vasopressor experience among paramedics with regard to preference as well as the barriers to its preparation and administration. Methods A cross-sectional survey of vasopressor use by nationally certified paramedics (NRPs) was performed. A 20-item questionnaire was constructed to capture the prehospital perceptions and barriers of dopamine infusion, norepinephrine infusion, and IV bolus “push-dose” epinephrine (PD-E). Data collection was carried out from June to September 2021. Results A total of 44 responses were obtained (response rate = 44%). All participants had experience using vasopressors and understood their medical indications. Overall, PD-E was the most common vasopressor used in the prehospital setting, and participants felt equally confident in “using” and “preparing” it. Participants felt less confident with “using” and “preparing” vasopressors that required channel setup and maintaining a flow rate. Younger paramedics with less than five years of experience were more eager to use norepinephrine if trucks were stocked with pre-mixed norepinephrine rather than the current formulation that required compounding.  Conclusion This study provided preliminary data that evaluated perceptions of vasopressor use in the prehospital setting among paramedics in a large urban environment. Preference and barriers to its preparation and administration were surveyed. Further research is needed to identify the interventions to reduce barriers and allow paramedics to be less limited by logistical considerations when choosing vasopressors in the prehospital setting. 
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spelling pubmed-96030662022-10-31 Perceptions and Barriers to Administering Vasopressors in the Prehospital Setting Quinn, Eric Su, John Fei, Lorraine Liu, Joseph Friedman, Matt Lobel, David Kabiriti, Sarah Likourezos, Antonios Motov, Sergey Eng, David Cureus Emergency Medicine Introduction Vasopressor administration is a critical medical intervention for patients with hypotension in undifferentiated shock states. Over the years, prehospital care has advanced with protocols and training that allow paramedics in the field to administer a variety of vasopressors. The primary objective of this investigation was to evaluate vasopressor experience among paramedics with regard to preference as well as the barriers to its preparation and administration. Methods A cross-sectional survey of vasopressor use by nationally certified paramedics (NRPs) was performed. A 20-item questionnaire was constructed to capture the prehospital perceptions and barriers of dopamine infusion, norepinephrine infusion, and IV bolus “push-dose” epinephrine (PD-E). Data collection was carried out from June to September 2021. Results A total of 44 responses were obtained (response rate = 44%). All participants had experience using vasopressors and understood their medical indications. Overall, PD-E was the most common vasopressor used in the prehospital setting, and participants felt equally confident in “using” and “preparing” it. Participants felt less confident with “using” and “preparing” vasopressors that required channel setup and maintaining a flow rate. Younger paramedics with less than five years of experience were more eager to use norepinephrine if trucks were stocked with pre-mixed norepinephrine rather than the current formulation that required compounding.  Conclusion This study provided preliminary data that evaluated perceptions of vasopressor use in the prehospital setting among paramedics in a large urban environment. Preference and barriers to its preparation and administration were surveyed. Further research is needed to identify the interventions to reduce barriers and allow paramedics to be less limited by logistical considerations when choosing vasopressors in the prehospital setting.  Cureus 2022-09-26 /pmc/articles/PMC9603066/ /pubmed/36321024 http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.29614 Text en Copyright © 2022, Quinn et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Emergency Medicine
Quinn, Eric
Su, John
Fei, Lorraine
Liu, Joseph
Friedman, Matt
Lobel, David
Kabiriti, Sarah
Likourezos, Antonios
Motov, Sergey
Eng, David
Perceptions and Barriers to Administering Vasopressors in the Prehospital Setting
title Perceptions and Barriers to Administering Vasopressors in the Prehospital Setting
title_full Perceptions and Barriers to Administering Vasopressors in the Prehospital Setting
title_fullStr Perceptions and Barriers to Administering Vasopressors in the Prehospital Setting
title_full_unstemmed Perceptions and Barriers to Administering Vasopressors in the Prehospital Setting
title_short Perceptions and Barriers to Administering Vasopressors in the Prehospital Setting
title_sort perceptions and barriers to administering vasopressors in the prehospital setting
topic Emergency Medicine
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9603066/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36321024
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.29614
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