Dispatch Decisions and Emergency Medical Services Response in the Prehospital Care of Status Epilepticus
Robert P. McInnis, Andrew J. Wood, Courtney L. Shay, Anna A. Haggart, Remle P. Crowe, Elan L. Guterman

TL;DR
This study examines how emergency dispatch systems classify and respond to patients with status epilepticus, finding that dispatch algorithms may not be optimally identifying seizure emergencies.
Contribution
The study reveals that dispatch algorithms may not accurately identify seizure emergencies and could be optimized to improve emergency medical services response.
Findings
Approximately 25% of SE cases were misclassified as non-seizure-related conditions at dispatch.
Fewer than half of seizure-related cases received the highest acuity code despite similar response times across all acuity levels.
Dispatch-assigned acuity had little impact on ambulance response or responder training level.
Abstract
Emergency medical dispatch is intended to ensure that emergency medical services (EMS) allocate appropriate resources for the treatment of patients with status epilepticus (SE). However, it is unclear whether dispatch algorithms accurately identify those patients having a seizure-related medical emergency and how dispatch algorithms influence what prehospital resources are allocated for the encounter. We performed a cross-sectional analysis of prehospital encounters for SE using data from the 2019 ESO Data Collaborative. We included patients who were ≥18 years of age, had an EMS diagnostic impression of SE, and did not have a cardiac arrest. We examined the dispatch-determined complaint designated by the emergency medical dispatch (EMD) code, dispatch-determined level of acuity (A, B, C, D), ambulance response, and training level of the responding prehospital professional. Of the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEpilepsy research and treatment · Pharmacological Effects and Toxicity Studies · Hemoglobinopathies and Related Disorders
