321860
Reconsidering Rural Policy as Emergency Medical Service Workers Piloted New Screening and Referral Practices
Wednesday, November 4, 2015
:
Robert Jecklin, MPH, PhD,
Department of Health Education and Health Promotion, University of Wisconsin-La Crosse, La Crosse, WI
In a state where all rural communities were served by emergency medical services (EMS), it made sense to make those services more responsive to community needs including the potential for risk-reducing services found in the lives of older adults. A rural EMS provider, an EMS education provider, and a university researcher partnered and sought funding for a pilot project where EMS workers adopted new practices to screen medically stable older adults (aged 60 years and up) for risks related to falls, medication errors, untreated depression and household hazards. After EMS continuing education and during a 13-month pilot project, 14 EMS workers incorporated new screening and referral practices into their regular response to 1,556 requests for help from older adults (or 63% of all medical calls to 911). EMS workers transported 1,378 older adults to a hospital and based on project-related screening, the EMS workers referred 369 persons to hospital social services for risk-reducing services. While both the hospital social service and EMS workers agreed that referrals benefitted patients, project partners reconsidered both policy barriers and policy solutions that would benefit persons who were not transported to hospitals, and policy alternatives that would allow easier access to risk-reducing services outside of the hospital.
Learning Areas:
Other professions or practice related to public health
Provision of health care to the public
Public health or related laws, regulations, standards, or guidelines
Learning Objectives:
Identify resources for training emergency medical service workers to better serve older adults.
Screen older adults and their living environments for risks including falls, medication errors, and untreated depression.
Identify EMS leadership tasks inherent in this type of program improvement.
Reconsider and discuss policies related to community-based EMS for older adults.
Keyword(s): Rural Health, Aging
Presenting author's disclosure statement:Qualified on the content I am responsible for because: I was the lead evaluation researcher for the pilot project described in the abstract.
Any relevant financial relationships? No
I agree to comply with the American Public Health Association Conflict of Interest and Commercial Support Guidelines,
and to disclose to the participants any off-label or experimental uses of a commercial product or service discussed
in my presentation.