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Naemsp 1999 annual meeting
Authors:Paul E Pepe  Robert A Swor  Joseph P Ornato  Edward M Racht  Donald M Blanton  John K Griswell
Institution:1. Department of Surgery and EMS Medical Direction Team, for the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, the City of Dallas, and 12 surrounding Dallas area municipalities, Dallas, Texas (PEP);2. the Department of Emergency Medicine, Wayne State University, Detroit, and EMS Programs, Department of Emergency Medicine, William Beaumont Hospital, Royal Oak, Michigan (RAS);3. Medical College of Virginia, Richmond, Virginia (JPO);4. Austin/Travis County EMS, Austin, Texas (EMR);5. Nashville Fire Department EMS and Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, Tennessee (DMB);6. Medstar Ambulance and Emergency Physicians Advisory Board, Fort Worth, Texas (JKG);7. Mecklenburg EMS Agency and the Center for Prehospital Medicine, Carolinas Medical Center, Charlotte, North Carolina (TB);8. and City of San Diego EMS, UCSD Medical Center, San Diego, California (JD).
Abstract:The complete and irreversible cessation of life is often difficult to determine with complete confidence in the dynamic environment of out-of-hospital emergency care. As a result, resuscitation efforts often are initiated and maintained by emergency medical services (EMS) providers in many hopeless situations. Medical guidelines are reviewed here to aid EMS organizations with respect to decisions about: 1) initiating or waiving resuscitation efforts; 2) the appropriate duration of resuscitation efforts; and 3) recommended procedures for on-scene or prehospital pronouncement of death (termination of resuscitation). In cases of nontraumatic cardiac arrest, few unassailable criteria, other than certain physical signs of irreversible tissue deterioration, exist for determining medical futility at the initial encounter with the patient. Thus, the general medical recommendation is to attempt to resuscitate all patients, adult or child, in the absence of rigor mortis or dependent lividity. Conversely, well-founded guidelines now are available for decisions regarding termination of resuscitation in such patients once they have received a trial of advanced cardiac life support. In practice, however, the final decision to proceed with on-scene pronouncement of death for these patients may be determined more by family and provider comfort levels and the specific on-scene environment. For patients with posttraumatic circulatory arrest, the type of injury (blunt or penetrating), the presence of vital signs, and the electrocardiographic findings are used to determine the futility of initiating or continuing resuscitation efforts. In general, patients who are asystolic on-scene are candidates for on-scene pronouncement, regardless of mechanism. With a few exceptions, blunt trauma patients with a clearly associated mechanism of lethal injury are generally candidates for immediate cessation of efforts once they lose their pulses and respirations. Regardless of the medical futility criteria, specialized training of EMS providers and targeted related testing of operational issues need to precede field implementation of on-scene pronouncement policies. Such policies also must be modified and adapted for local issues and resources. In addition, although the current determinations of medical futility, as delineated here, are important to establish for societal needs, the individual patient's right to live must be kept in mind always as new medical advances are developed.
Keywords:death  field pronouncement  pronouncement of death  futility  resuscitation  cardiac arrest  trauma  
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