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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 March 2020
Agitation is a frequent and complex emergency. Its early detection and adequate treatment are crucial to ensure the best outcomes. Pre-hospital management of agitation requires appropriate measures to preserve patients’ safety, stabilize the patient and alleviate suffering, and transfer to the hospital psychiatric services, including involuntary admission if needed.
To describe the management of agitation by the Emergency Medical Services (EMS) in Spain.
Observational retrospective survey on the protocols and procedures used, the number of in-calls received and the resources dedicated to attend emergencies in 2013.
Seven out of the seventeen EMS in Spain provided information. All of them registered in a database in-calls and actions taken. Four of them had a specific protocol to attend psychiatric emergencies and agitation in-calls, and five coded the initial diagnostic with ICD-9. Paramedics attending emergencies register the diagnostic in 3/7 EMS. Nursing and Medical staff code the final diagnostic with ICD-9 in all. Emergency Coordination Centres received 4,437,388 in-calls (209/1000 inhabitants); 2.6% classified as psychiatric (6.2/1000 inhab.). Healthcare teams attended 2,028,467 emergencies, 84,933 (4.2%) were psychiatric (4.0/1000 inhab.) and 37,951 (1.9%) were patients with agitation (2.0/1000 inhab.). General practitioners attended 17% of all psychiatric emergencies, while ambulances attended 61%.
The incidence of acute agitation accounts for almost half of the total psychiatric emergencies in the pre-hospital setting. Since there are different healthcare providers in charge, specific protocols as well as treatment procedures are needed to provide the most adequate management, in order to ensure the best Psychiatric Emergency Chain.
The authors have not supplied their declaration of competing interest.
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