Clinical reasoning amongst paramedics using nebulised β₂ agonists to treat acute asthma exacerbations: a qualitative study
Craig Mortimer, Dimitra Nikoletou, Ann Ooms, Julia Williams

TL;DR
This study explores how paramedics use clinical judgment and experience to treat asthma attacks with beta-agonists, adapting care based on patient-specific factors.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into paramedics' clinical reasoning and adaptive approaches in treating asthma exacerbations using β₂ agonists.
Findings
Paramedics adapt treatment based on patient presentation, experience, and side effect severity.
Anxiety and diabetes are identified as factors influencing β₂ agonist administration and care pathways.
Clinical experience and guideline adaptation enhance paramedics' ability to manage asthma exacerbations effectively.
Abstract
The heterogeneous nature of asthma results in a wide range of presentations during exacerbation. Despite UK pre-hospital management guidelines focusing on β₂ agonists, variables such as cause, severity, underlying health, comorbidities, and drug side effects can often make emergency treatment optimisation difficult. This article examines paramedics’ methods of observing, perceiving, interpreting, and treating asthma with β₂ agonists, often acting on limited information in rapidly evolving situations. We recruited paramedics from a single UK National Health Service ambulance Trust for qualitative semi-structured interviews. Responses underwent framework analysis to identify data similarities and differences. Fifteen qualitative interviews with paramedics revealed three main themes affecting patient management: clinician experience of presentation, adaptation of patient management…
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Taxonomy
TopicsClinical Reasoning and Diagnostic Skills · Hyperglycemia and glycemic control in critically ill and hospitalized patients · Education and Critical Thinking Development
