Babies born in the prehospital setting attended by ambulance clinicians in the north east of England. Service Evaluation.
McClelland, Graham, Burrows, Emma and McAdam, Helen (2019) Babies born in the prehospital setting attended by ambulance clinicians in the north east of England. Service Evaluation. Babies born in the pre-hospital setting attended by ambulance clinicians in the north east of England, 4 (3). pp. 43-48. ISSN 1478-4726
Item Type: | Article |
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Abstract
Introduction: The majority of births in the UK happen in hospital or at stand alone midwife led centres, or with the support of midwives in a planned fashion outside of hospital. the unplanned birth of a baby in the prehospital setting is a rare event which may result in an ambulance being called, so attendance at a birth is a rare event for ambulance clinicians. A service evaluation was conducted to report which clinical observations were recorded on babies born in the prehospital setting who were attended by ambulance clinicians form the NEAS over a one year period.
Methods: a retrospective service evaluation was conducted using routinely collected data. All electronic patient care records covering a one year period between 1 October 2017 and 30 September 2018 with a primary impression of 'childbirth' were examined.
Results: this evaluation identified 168 individual prehospital childbirth cases attended by NEAS clinicians during the evaluation timeframe. The majority (85%) of babies were born to multiparous mothers with a median gestation of 39 weeks. Very few clinical observations were recorded on the babies (respiratory rate 23%, heart rate 21%, temperature 10%, APGAR 8%, blood sugar 1%) and no babies had all five of these observations documented. Only 5% of babies had any complications documented.
Conclusion: this study showed that NEAS ambulance clinicians rarely attend babies born in the prehospital setting and that complications were infrequently recorded. There was a lack of observations recorded on the babies, which is an issue due to the clear link between easily measurable characteristics such as temperature and mortality and morbidity.
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More Information
Uncontrolled Keywords: ambulance, childbirth, prehospital |
Depositing User: Helen McAdam |
Identifiers
Item ID: 18927 |
Identification Number: https://doi.org/10.29045/14784726.2019.12.4.3.43 |
ISSN: 1478-4726 |
URI: http://sure.sunderland.ac.uk/id/eprint/18927 | Official URL: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33447150/ |
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Catalogue record
Date Deposited: 08 Apr 2025 08:50 |
Last Modified: 08 Apr 2025 09:00 |
Author: |
Graham McClelland
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Author: | Emma Burrows |
Author: | Helen McAdam |
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Faculty of Health Sciences and Wellbeing > School of Nursing and Health SciencesSubjects
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