학술논문

Medical emergencies on a medium-sized urban university campus with collegiate-based EMS.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of American College Health. Nov/Dec 2021, Vol. 69 Issue 8, p971-975. 5p. 2 Charts, 4 Graphs.
Subject
*ACQUISITION of data methodology
*SUBSTANCE abuse
*RETROSPECTIVE studies
*EMERGENCY medical services
*UNIVERSITIES & colleges
*MEDICAL records
*DESCRIPTIVE statistics
*METROPOLITAN areas
*WOUNDS & injuries
Language
ISSN
0744-8481
Abstract
Objective This study aimed to identify the types and frequency of acute medical events at a university with a collegiate-based emergency medical services (CBEMS) agency. Participants: Patients who requested assistance from the studied CBEMS agency, which provides emergency medical services coverage at a medium-sized urban university. Methods: This retrospective chart review examined requests for emergency service from August 2010-July 2017. Data abstracted include the type of medical event, frequency, call times/dates, and locations of reported medical events. Results: The studied agency received an average 889.4 (SD +/−68.6 calls) per year with the most common falling under the categories of "Substance Abuse" (231.7 calls/year, SD +/−15.7) and "Minor Trauma" (207.1 calls/year, SD+/−37.8). Most requests for acute medical attention occurred between the hours of 1800–0600 on Fridays and Saturdays. Implications/Conclusions: These results suggest that universities can potentially predict patterns and prepare for the types of acute medical issues that occur on campus. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]