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Registered nurses' experiences of their decision‐making at an Emergency Medical Dispatch Centre

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  • Bosse Ek
  • Marianne Svedlund

Abstract

Aims and objectives To describe registered nurses′ experiences at an Emergency Medical Dispatch Centre. Background It is important that ambulances are urgently directed to patients who are in need of immediate help and of quick transportation to a hospital. Because resources are limited, Emergency Medical Dispatch centres cannot send ambulances with high priority to all callers. The efficiency of the system is therefore dependent on triage. Nurses worldwide are involved in patient triage, both before the patient′s arrival to the hospital and in the subsequent emergency care. Ambulance dispatching is traditionally a duty for operators at Emergency Medical Dispatch centres, and in Sweden this duty has become increasingly performed by registered nurses. Design A qualitative design was used for this study. Methods Fifteen registered nurses with experience at Emergency Medical Dispatch centres were interviewed. The participants were asked to describe the content of their work and their experiences. They also described the most challenging and difficult situations according to the critical incidence technique. Content analysis was used. Results Two themes emerged during the analysis: ‘Having a profession with opportunities and obstacles’ and ‘Meeting serious and difficult situations’, with eight sub‐themes. The results showed that the decisions to dispatch ambulances were both challenging and difficult. Difficulties included conveying medical advice without seeing the patient, teaching cardio‐pulmonary resuscitation via telephone and dealing with intoxicated and aggressive callers. Conflicts with colleagues and ambulance crews as well as fear of making wrong decisions were also mentioned. Conclusions Work at Emergency Medical Dispatch centres is a demanding but stimulating duty for registered nurses. Relevance to clinical practice Great benefits can be achieved using experienced triage nurses, including increased patient safety and better use of medical resources. Improved internal support systems at Emergency Medical Dispatch centres and striving for a blame‐free culture are important factors to attract and retain employees.

Suggested Citation

  • Bosse Ek & Marianne Svedlund, 2015. "Registered nurses' experiences of their decision‐making at an Emergency Medical Dispatch Centre," Journal of Clinical Nursing, John Wiley & Sons, vol. 24(7-8), pages 1122-1131, April.
  • Handle: RePEc:wly:jocnur:v:24:y:2015:i:7-8:p:1122-1131
    DOI: 10.1111/jocn.12701
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    Cited by:

    1. Kristoffer Wibring & Johan Herlitz & Markus Lingman & Angela Bång, 2019. "Symptom description in patients with chest pain—A qualitative analysis of emergency medical calls involving high‐risk conditions," Journal of Clinical Nursing, John Wiley & Sons, vol. 28(15-16), pages 2844-2857, August.

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