scholarly journals Linking Emergency Medical Service Data to Death Records for Opioid Mortality Surveillance

2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Joseph R. Tatar ◽  
Jennifer Broad

ObjectiveTo identify the correlates of opioids as an underlying cause of death by linking coroner/medical examiner vital death records with emergency medical service (EMS) ambulance run data. By combining death data to EMS ambulance runs, the goal was to determine characteristics of the emergency response—particularly for opioid overdose events—that may connect to increased mortality.IntroductionOpioid abuse has increased exponentially in recent years throughout the United States, leading to an increase in the incidence of emergency response activities, hospitalization, and mortality related to opioid overdose. As a result, states that have been hit particularly hard during this period—such as Wisconsin—have allocated considerable resources to addressing this crisis via enhanced public health surveillance and outreach, procurement and administration of medical countermeasures, prescription drug monitoring programs, targeted preventive and acute treatment, first responder and hospital staff training, cross-agency collaboration, and Incident Management System activities. Central to these efforts is the identification of the primary drivers of opioid overdose and death to improve the precision and efficacy of targeted public health interventions to address the opioid crisis. The present study sought to accomplish this end by syncing rich data sources at the point of emergency response (EMS ambulance runs) to ultimate mortality outcomes (vital death records).MethodsIn the State of Wisconsin, data systems supporting the surveillance of EMS ambulance runs and coroner/medical examiner death records are both maintained under the Department of Health Services, enhancing the ability of public health researchers to connect these records using matched identifiers. Two years of EMS ambulance run data (2016-2017) were matched to three years of vital death records (2016-2018) that listed opioids as a contributing cause of death. Ambulance runs and death records for individuals aged 10 years or younger were removed from the data prior to matching and were not included in the final analytic set. Records between these two systems were matched using patient first and last name, gender, date of birth, and zip code. Ambulance runs for a suspected opioid overdose were identified by mining text fields from EMS primary and secondary impressions as well as incident narrative details that identified an opioid as a likely cause of the event. Ambulance runs resulting in Narcan/naloxone administration were also identified as opioid-related overdose. Coroner/medical examiner death records that identified opioids as a contributing cause were classified as an opioid-related death. Analyses examining correlates of deaths with opioids as a contributing cause focused on patient demographics, Narcan/naloxone administration rates and dosage, date and time of the ambulance run, lag between EMS response and time of opioid-related death, physical location and urbanicity of the incident, and the type of response by EMS personnel (i.e. treated and transported, treated and released, no treatment, patient refusal, DOA).ResultsFrom 2016-2017, there were over 800,000 emergency ambulance runs among those aged 11 years and older. Opioid overdose ambulance runs accounted for 1.1% (9,761) of those runs. There were over 100,000 deaths in Wisconsin and 1.7% (1,797) were related to opioids (i.e. opioids were a contributing cause). Linking resulted in 268 people with opioid overdose ambulance runs who had an opioid-related death. Of these, 34% died at the scene of the ambulance run, 12% died later that day, 16% died within a week of the ambulance run, and 37% died after a week. While all of these deaths had a contributing cause of opioids, 97% also had an underlying cause of death of drug overdose. Comparing those who died to those who didn’t die, those who died were more likely to be male, younger, and had the event occur on a Saturday. Additionally, while there were no differences in the likelihood of Narcan/naloxone receipt by opioid-related death, individuals who died were more likely to have received multiple Narcan/naloxone doses during the ambulance run than those who did not. Of those who died at the scene, the majority (32%) were aged 30 to 39 years. Of those who died later, the majority (32%) were aged 20 to 29 years. Also, for those who died at the scene, the majority of the events occurred from eight pm to midnight while for those who died later, the majority of events occurred from four to eight pm.ConclusionsThe majority of linked deaths to opioid ambulance runs were due to an underlying cause of drug overdose with opioids as a contributing cause. This demonstrates that the impressions of the EMS personnel were correct. The fact that so many of those who died did so at the scene highlights the continued need for community naloxone distribution. Additionally, there appear to be characteristic differences between those who died, those who died at the scene, and those who didn’t die. The results from this study highlight the benefits of connecting multiple sources of data to facilitate the identification of emergency health care drivers of opioid-related death, but there is still work to be done. Future analyses from this project will seek to link the existing data to hospitalization and post-discharge care records to capture a more complete picture of opioid-related deaths across the entire patient lifecycle. This future work will serve to fill key gaps in the surveillance process, particularly for instances opioid overdose and death where EMS was not called into service. 

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ida Tylleskar ◽  
Linn Gjersing ◽  
Lars Petter Bjørnsen ◽  
Anne-Cathrine Braarud ◽  
Fridtjof Heyerdahl ◽  
...  

Abstract Introduction:Amidst the ongoing opioid crisis there are debates regarding the optimal route of administration and dosages of naloxone. This applies both for lay people administration and emergency medical services, and in the development of new naloxone products.We examined the characteristics of naloxone administration, including predictors of dosages and multiple doses during patient treatment by emergency medical service staff in order enlighten this debate.Methods: This was a prospective observational study of patients administered naloxone by the Oslo City Center emergency medical service, Norway (2014-2018). Cases were linked to The National Cause of Death Registry. We investigated the route of administration and dosage of naloxone, clinical and demographic variables relating to initial naloxone dose and use of multiple naloxone doses and one-week mortality.Results: Overall, 2,215 cases were included, and the majority (91.9%) were administered intramuscular naloxone. Initial doses were 0.4 or 0.8 mg, and 15% of patients received multiple dosages. Unconscious patients or those in respiratory arrest were more likely to be treated with 0.8 mg naloxone and to receive multiple doses. The one-week mortality from drug-related deaths was 4.1 per 1000 episodes, with no deaths due to rebound toxicity.Conclusions: Intramuscular naloxone doses of 0.4 and 0.8 mg were effective and safe in the treatment of opioid overdose in the prehospital setting. Emergency medical staff appear to titrate naloxone based on clinical presentation.


2015 ◽  
Vol 105 (S3) ◽  
pp. e26-e32 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark Faul ◽  
Michael W. Dailey ◽  
David E. Sugerman ◽  
Scott M. Sasser ◽  
Benjamin Levy ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 1 ◽  
pp. 1-2
Author(s):  
Tianqi Xia ◽  
Shuzhe Huang ◽  
Xuan Song ◽  
Ruochen Si ◽  
Xiaoya Song ◽  
...  

<p><strong>Abstract.</strong> Emergency medical service (EMS) is one kind of medical services which focuses on providing first-time rescue to victims of sudden and life-threatening emergencies. Since a lot of studies have pointed out a close relation between the increase of cost time before the patient accommodated to the hospital and the increased risk of mortality, a reasonable distribution of EMS facilities can shorten the transportation time from the scene to the hospital and is critical to ensure the quality of the EMS system.</p><p>With the development of geographic information science and technology, GIS provides the visualization and analysis approaches for the distribution of the EMS cases, ambulance cars and hospitals as well as the ability of measuring road network distance, which results in the popularity of research with GIS based analysis approaches in the field of public health and EMS system. Despite of the prosperity in such kind of studies, most of them focused on evaluating EMS system by observational case analysis while paying less attention on the emergency medical resource distribution.</p><p>With the concerns we mentioned above, this research conducts spatial and temporal analysis for evaluating the transportation time via several GIS methods and take the EMS cases in Tokyo 23 wards as a case study. In addition to the observational studies with EMS case data and several spatial and temporal factors, we pay more attention on evaluating the distribution of cases and hospitals from both sides of demand and supplement. In addition, we also check several assumptions that are widely used in accessibility analysis on public health. As far as we know, our work is first research on detailed hospital distribution analysis in Tokyo area based on observations.</p><p>


10.2196/22331 ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. e22331 ◽  
Author(s):  
David R Sayers ◽  
Scott T Hulse ◽  
Bryant J Webber ◽  
Timothy A Burns ◽  
Anne L Denicoff

Epidemiologic and syndromic surveillance metrics traditionally used by public health departments can be enhanced to better predict hospitalization for coronavirus disease (COVID-19). In Montgomery County, Maryland, measurements of oxygen saturation (SpO2) by pulse oximetry obtained by the emergency medical service (EMS) were added to these traditional metrics to enhance the public health picture for decision makers. During a 78-day period, the rolling 7-day average of the percentage of EMS patients with SpO2 <94% had a stronger correlation with next-day hospital bed occupancy (Spearman ρ=0.58, 95% CI 0.40-0.71) than either the rolling 7-day average of the percentage of positive tests (ρ=0.55, 95% CI: 0.37-0.69) or the rolling 7-day average of the percentage of emergency department visits for COVID-19–like illness (ρ=0.49, 95% CI: 0.30-0.64). Health departments should consider adding EMS data to augment COVID-19 surveillance and thus improve resource allocation.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
David R Sayers ◽  
Scott T Hulse ◽  
Bryant J Webber ◽  
Timothy A Burns ◽  
Anne L Denicoff

UNSTRUCTURED Epidemiologic and syndromic surveillance metrics traditionally used by public health departments can be enhanced to better predict hospitalization for coronavirus disease (COVID-19). In Montgomery County, Maryland, measurements of oxygen saturation (SpO<sub>2</sub>) by pulse oximetry obtained by the emergency medical service (EMS) were added to these traditional metrics to enhance the public health picture for decision makers. During a 78-day period, the rolling 7-day average of the percentage of EMS patients with SpO<sub>2</sub> &lt;94% had a stronger correlation with next-day hospital bed occupancy (Spearman ρ=0.58, 95% CI 0.40-0.71) than either the rolling 7-day average of the percentage of positive tests (ρ=0.55, 95% CI: 0.37-0.69) or the rolling 7-day average of the percentage of emergency department visits for COVID-19–like illness (ρ=0.49, 95% CI: 0.30-0.64). Health departments should consider adding EMS data to augment COVID-19 surveillance and thus improve resource allocation.


2017 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Em Stephens

ObjectiveTo develop and evaluate syndrome definitions for the identificationof acute unintentional drug overdose events including opioid, heroin,and unspecified substances among emergency department (ED) visitsin Virginia.IntroductionNationally, deaths due to opioid overdose have continuallyincreased for the past 15 years1. Deaths specifically related to heroinincreased more than four-fold between 2002 and 20142. Hospitalinpatient discharge data provide information on non-fatal overdoses,but include a significant lag in reporting time3. Syndromic ED visitdata provide near real-time identification of public health issues andcan be leveraged to inform public health actions on the emergingthreat of drug overdose.MethodsVirginia Department of Health (VDH) developed two syndromedefinitions in 2014 to capture acute unintentional drug overdoseevents among syndromic ED visit data. Syndrome 1 captured visitsfor overdose, whether or not a specific substance was mentioned.Syndrome 2 captured only visits for heroin overdose. Definitionswere based on free-text terms found within the chief complaintand standardized text or International Classification of Diseases(ICD) codes within the diagnosis field. In 2016, both definitionswere revised to identify additional inclusion and exclusion criteriaaccording to CDC guidance documentation and syndrome definitionsused by other state jurisdictions.Microsoft SQL was used to modify both definitions based on thenewly identified chief complaint and diagnosis criteria. Record leveldata were analyzed for their adherence to established criteria using aniterative evaluation process.The scope of Syndrome 1 (2016) was narrowed from the 2014version by excluding visits for non-opioid substances, heroin, andnon-acute indicators. It included chief complaint and diagnosisterms related to opioids, unspecified substance overdose, narcotics,and Narcan or naloxone, and excluded terms related to suicide,alcohol overdose alone, withdrawal, detoxification, rehab, addiction,constipation, chronic pain, and any specified non-opioid drug ormedication. Syndrome 2 (2016) included chief complaint or diagnosisterms mentioning heroin overdose and excluded suicide, withdrawal,detoxification, rehab, and addiction. Visits with mention of suicide,rehab, or addiction were identified during the evaluation process,resulting in the exclusion of these terms in the revised query.From January 1, 2015 to July 31, 2016, the number of visitscaptured by the revised syndrome definitions was compared to thenumber captured by the 2014 definitions. Correlation coefficientswere calculated using SAS 9.3.ResultsThe revised Syndrome 1 found 4296 fewer ED visits(29% decrease) for acute unintentional drug overdose betweenJanuary 1, 2015 and July 31, 2016 compared to the 2014 definition.Despite the drop in volume, the monthly trends were similar forthe 2014 and 2016 definitions (correlation coefficient = 0.95,p < 0.001). For the same time period, the revised Syndrome 2 definitionreturned 108 fewer visits (6% decrease) for acute unintentional heroinoverdose. The monthly trends were also similar for the 2014 and 2016definitions (correlation coefficient = 0.98, p < 0.001).ConclusionsBoth revised syndrome definitions improved specificity incapturing overdose visits as Syndrome 1 (2016) identified 29% fewervisits and Syndrome 2 (2016) identified 6% fewer visits found to beunrelated to the desired overdose criteria.When developing the revised syndrome definitions, VDH decidedto exclude non-acute drug-related visits. Terms such as addiction,detoxification, rehab, withdrawal, chronic pain, and constipation wereindicative of habitual drug use or abuse instead of acute overdose andwere thus excluded. In narrowing the scope of Syndrome 1, VDHalso identified and excluded visits for specified drug and medicationoverdose. Together, these expanded exclusion criteria resulted ingreater specificity with both updated syndromes.These revised syndrome definitions enable VDH to better trackopioid and heroin overdose trends in near real-time and overextended time periods which can be used to inform public healthactions. Limitations include the inconsistency of diagnosis codingamong syndromic data submitters, which may lead to geographicunderrepresentation of unintentional drug overdose visits based onthe location of health care systems. VDH will continue to evaluate andrefine these overdose syndrome definitions as this emerging healthissue evolves.


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