Specialist Paramedic Rotations And Their Impact on Non-conveyancE Decisions
NCT ID: NCT04193800
Last Updated: 2019-12-16
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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UNKNOWN
33600 participants
OBSERVATIONAL
2020-01-01
2020-04-01
Brief Summary
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To improve the care Yorkshire Ambulance Service provide to their patients, some paramedics have received additional training. These advanced paramedics have been very successful at treating patients in their own home safely. However, their training is long and expensive, so another role, the specialist paramedic role has been introduced. Their training does not take as long and is cheaper to provide. However, the specialist paramedics do not appear to keep patients safely at home more often than regular paramedics. Recently, the specialist paramedics have taken part in a national paramedic programme, where they are given the chance to work in GP surgeries and emergency call centres.
This study aims to see if specialist paramedics who have worked in a GP surgery for 10 weeks, can keep patients at home safely, and without costing too much, more often than regular paramedics.
Detailed Description
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Yorkshire Ambulance Service have been early adopters of initiatives to address inappropriate conveyance, and have had paramedics working in the role of Emergency Care Practitioners (ECP), since 2004. ECPs consistently have non-conveyance rates double that of other paramedics in the Trust. More recently, the specialist paramedic (SP) role has been introduced, although the educational programme is less substantial than that of the ECPs, and non-conveyance rates have been no different to other paramedics within the Trust.
In 2018, Health Education England funded a pilot scheme to rotate paramedics into a range of healthcare settings, with the aim of improving patient care and relieving pressures on primary care, ambulance services and other parts of the NHS in a sustainable way. This pilot also presents an opportunity to develop SPs and potentially, improve their rates of appropriate non-conveyance which may deliver patient and cost-benefits of the role as originally anticipated.
This study aims to evaluate whether the paramedics who have rotated into primary care, are appropriately and cost-effectively increasing the level and trend of non-conveyance decisions compared to a matched control population of YAS paramedics.
This study will use a dataset comprised of non-identifiable, routinely collected, ambulance service data to undertake a controlled interrupted time series analysis. This is one of the strongest quasi-experimental designs to detect change in the level and trend of paramedic appropriate non-conveyance decisions. The cost-effectiveness analysis will examine the cost per appropriate non-conveyance achieved for patients receiving care from paramedics who have completed a 10-week rotation in a GP surgery compared with those receiving care from paramedics who did not take part in the primary care rotational pilot.
Conditions
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Study Design
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OTHER
RETROSPECTIVE
Study Groups
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Rotational paramedic pilot group
10-week rotation in primary care setting
Ten paramedics underwent a 10 week rotation into a GP practice in the Leeds area of South Yorkshire, England.
Paramedic control group
No interventions assigned to this group
Interventions
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10-week rotation in primary care setting
Ten paramedics underwent a 10 week rotation into a GP practice in the Leeds area of South Yorkshire, England.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Adult patient receiving a face-to-face assessment by a paramedic taking part in the primary care rotation pilot, or
* Matched adult patient who receive a face-to-face assessment by a paramedic not taking part in the rotation pilot
* Has a completed paper or electronic patient care record.
Exclusion Criteria
18 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Applied Research Collaboration for Yorkshire and Humber
UNKNOWN
Yorkshire Ambulance Service NHS Trust
OTHER_GOV
Responsible Party
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Locations
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Yorkshire Ambulance Service NHS Trust
Wakefield, West Yorkshire, United Kingdom
Countries
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Other Identifiers
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YASRD128
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id