Ambulance Clinicians' Experiences of Attending OHCA in Children

NCT ID: NCT06922019

Last Updated: 2025-04-10

Study Results

Results pending

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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Recruitment Status

NOT_YET_RECRUITING

Total Enrollment

2137 participants

Study Classification

OBSERVATIONAL

Study Start Date

2025-05-01

Study Completion Date

2027-01-31

Brief Summary

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This research will explore ambulance clinicians' experiences of attending out of hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) incidents involving children.

OHCA occurs when the heart stops beating. This is a time critical emergency that requires immediate treatment to maximise the changes of survival. OHCA affecting children is rare, but when it happens it is vital that paramedics and other ambulance clinicians can respond and deliver high quality care.

Because OHCA in children is rare, ambulance clinicians attend these incidents infrequently. Some clinicians may only ever attend this type of incident once in their career. These incidents are technically challenging for ambulance clinicians, and highly stressful. Evidence from other setting suggests that clinicians may be ill-prepared to manage these events.

This research aims to understand how OHCA incidents involving children are currently managed, and to explore the views and experiences of ambulance clinicians with respect to attending OHCA incidents involving children.

By learning from what is currently being done, and from clinicians' experiences, the research team aims to develop recommendations for how the response to these patients, and the support provided to ambulance clinicians, could be improved.

The research team will review the records of patients under the age of 18 who have been treated for OHCA by one ambulance service over a four-year period. Data will be collected from these records to allow the care delivered to be compared to international guidelines, and to explore what factors might influence the delivery of this care.

The research will also involve a survey of ambulance clinicians working across the UK to understand their experiences, and how prepared they feel to attend these incidents. Finally, the research team will undertake interviews with clinicians who have been involved in the management of a child with OHCA and focus group discussions with specialist clinicians to allow us to learn from their experiences.

Detailed Description

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Work Package 1:

This work package comprises of a retrospective cohort study of patients under the age of 18 who have been treated for out of hospital cardiac arrest by one UK ambulance service.

Pseudonymised data will be collated for each patient included in the study, describing all actions taken by the ambulance service from the point the call for emergency help was received by the ambulance service to the time death was confirmed, or the patient was handed over to a receiving hospital team. These data will be collected in case report forms within a secure electronic database system.

Data will be extracted from electronic records (including computer aided dispatch and electronic patient care records) held by the ambulance service. A researcher based in the ambulance service will review each record to ensure complete data capture, supplementing the records with additional information not captured by the electronic data extraction as required (e.g. data entered into free text boxes or captured in handwritten records).

Descriptive statistics will be used to describe the management of patients included in the cohort, and to compare the management to UK and international guidelines. Further analysis will explore if patient management differs in the presence of certain patient, clinician, system, or situational factors.

Work Package 2:

The research team will conduct an online survey of ambulance clinicians working across UK ambulance services. The survey will be distributed through ambulance service sites across the UK and through social media.

Questions will include Likert-style and open questions to assess clinician attitudes and views in relation to their preparedness to respond to cardiac arrests in children. Questions will also explore previous experience of attending these incidents.

Recognising that clinicians involved in the resuscitation of a child may be at risk of psychological injury, respondents who report previous exposure to OHCA incidents involving children will be administered the validated 'Impact of Event Scale - Revised' (IES-R) questionnaire as part of the survey. IES-R is a 22-question instrument designed to measure symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in reference to a specific traumatic event. All participants who have attended OHCA incidents involving an adult will be administered IES-R with reference to the most recent event which will provide a comparator group to quantify if differences in the response to adult and child OHCA exist

Work Package 3:

Semi-structured interviews will be undertaken with 12-15 clinicians who have recently (in the previous 12 months) attended a child with out of hospital cardiac arrest (recent exposure interview cohort). In these semi-structured interviews, the research team will explore the clinicians experience during and following the incident, their perceived preparedness for attending the incident and their experiences of post-event support. A topic-guide will be developed for the interview which will include an opportunity to explore any emergent issues or concepts from the analysis of the clinician survey (WP2).

In addition, a small number of interviews (3-4) will be undertaken with clinicians who attended an out of hospital cardiac arrest incident involving a child earlier in their career (\>12 months ago; historic exposure interview cohort). These interviews will follow the same format but will explore how perceptions and experiences of these events may have changed over time.

The research team will arrange 2-3 focus group discussions with specialist critical care ambulance clinicians (up to 6 clinicians per focus group; specialist clinician focus group cohort). These clinicians have a higher rate of exposure to out of hospital cardiac arrest incidents involving children, and by the nature of their dispatch models tend to arrive on scene later once interventions have been started. They will therefore have a unique insight into how their colleagues react to these incidents and the concerns expressed by these colleagues at the time or immediately following an incident.

The aim of these focus group discussions will be to explore this cadre of clinicians' experience of attending these events which may span many years and include a significant number of different events. Topic guides will be developed which will be influenced by the emerging themes from the clinician interviews. Where focus group discussions prove difficult to arrange, individual semi-structured interviews will be undertaken with eligible clinicians using the same topic guides.

Conditions

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Out of Hospital Cardiac Arrest

Study Design

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Observational Model Type

OTHER

Study Time Perspective

RETROSPECTIVE

Study Groups

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Out of hospital cardiac arrest patients

Data will be collected relating to approximately 600 patients aged \<18 years who were treated for out of hospital cardiac arrest by one UK ambulance service between 2021 and 2024

No interventions assigned to this group

Survey participants

Approximately 1,500 ambulance clinicians employed by National Health Service (NHS) ambulance trusts across the UK who participate in an online survey.

No interventions assigned to this group

Interview participants (recent exposure)

Approximately 12-15 ambulance clinicians with recent (\<12 months) exposure to an out of hospital cardiac arrest incident involving a child, who will participate in a semi-structured interview.

No interventions assigned to this group

Interview participants (historic exposure)

Approximately 3-4 ambulance clinicians with historic (\>12 months) exposure to an out of hospital cardiac arrest incident involving a child, who will participate in a semi-structured interview.

No interventions assigned to this group

Focus group participants

Up to 18 advanced/critical care paramedics who will participate in focus group discussions.

No interventions assigned to this group

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* Patients attended by London Ambulance Service NHS Trust (LAS)
* Incidents occurring between January 2021 and December 2024
* Out of Hospital Cardiac Arrest recognised by LAS clinicians
* Aged under 18 years at the time the incident occurred


* Ambulance clinician (including registered healthcare professionals and non-registered ambulance clinicians)
* Currently responds to 999 calls (face to face) as part of their role
* Would be expected to attend a paediatric OHCA incident as part of their role
* Consents to participate in study


* Ambulance clinician (including registered healthcare professionals and non-registered ambulance clinicians)
* Employed by a participating NHS Ambulance Service Site
* Attended an out of hospital cardiac arrest incident involving a child (\>1 day old, \< 18 years old) in the 12 months prior to the proposed interview date
* Consents to participation in the study


* Ambulance clinician (including registered healthcare professionals and non-registered ambulance clinicians)
* Employed by a participating NHS Ambulance Service Site
* Attended an out of hospital cardiac arrest incident involving a child (\>1 day old, \< 18 years old) more than 12 months prior to the proposed interview date
* Consents to participation in the study


* Ambulance clinician employed in a specialist critical care role (e.g. Critical Care Paramedic)
* Employed by a participating NHS Ambulance Service Site
* Consents to participation in the study

Exclusion Criteria

* New born patients who had not taken their first spontaneous breath before cardiac arrest was recognised
* Incidents occurring outside of LAS' operational area (Greater London, UK)
* Patients who have registered an NHS National Data Opt-Out

Survey participants


* Non-clinical ambulance service employee
* Not employed by an NHS Ambulance Service in the UK

Interview participants (recent exposure)


* Previously participated in an interview or focus group discussion as part of this study
* Employed in a specialist critical care role (e.g. Critical Care Paramedic)
* Attended an out of hospital cardiac arrest incident involving a child (\>1 day old, \<18 years old) within two weeks of the proposed interview date

Interview participants (historic exposure)


* Previously participated in an interview or focus group discussion as part of this study
* Attended an out of hospital cardiac arrest incident involving a child (\>1 day old, \< 18 years old) within 12 months of the proposed interview date
* Employed in a specialist critical care role (e.g. Critical Care Paramedic)

Focus group participants


* Previously participated in an interview or focus group discussion as part of this study
* Has not attended an out of hospital cardiac arrest incident involving a child (\>1 day old, \<18 years old) whilst working in a specialist critical care role (e.g. Critical Care Paramedic)
Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Sponsors

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London Ambulance Service NHS Trust

OTHER

Sponsor Role collaborator

Resuscitation Council UK

UNKNOWN

Sponsor Role collaborator

University of Warwick

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Keith Couper

Associate Professor

Responsibility Role PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Locations

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University of Warwick

Coventry, , United Kingdom

Site Status

Countries

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United Kingdom

Central Contacts

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Adam Mellett-Smith, MSc

Role: CONTACT

+447386665042

Facility Contacts

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Adam Mellett-Smith, MSc

Role: primary

+447386665042

Other Identifiers

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344286

Identifier Type: OTHER

Identifier Source: secondary_id

SOC.19/23-24

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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