Post-Pandemic Growth in 9-1-1 Paramedic Calls and Emergency Department Transports Surpasses Pre-Pandemic Rates in the COVID-19 Era: Implications for Paramedic Resource Planning.

Post-Pandemic Growth in 9-1-1 Paramedic Calls and Emergency Department Transports Surpasses Pre-Pandemic Rates in the COVID-19 Era: Implications for Paramedic Resource Planning.

Publication date: Jul 11, 2024

The COVID-19 pandemic led to a decline in emergency department (ED) visits and a subsequent return to baseline pre-pandemic levels. It is unclear if this trend extended to paramedic services and if patient cohorts accessing paramedics changed. We examined trends and associations between paramedic utilization (9-1-1 calls and ED transports) and the COVID-19 timeframe. We conducted a retrospective cross-sectional study using paramedic call data from the Hamilton Paramedic Services from January 2016 to December 2023. We included all 9-1-1 calls where paramedics responded to an incident, excluding paramedic interfacility transfers. We calculated lines of best fit for the pre-pandemic period (January 2016 to January 2020) and compared their predictions to the actual volumes in the post-pandemic period (May 2021 to December 2023). We used an interrupted time series regression model to determine the association between pandemic timeframes (pre-, during-, post-COVID-19) and paramedic utilization (9-1-1 calls and ED transports), while testing for annual seasonality. During the study timeframe, 577,278 calls for paramedics were received and 413,491 (71. 6%) were transported to the ED. Post-pandemic, 9-1-1 calls exceeded predicted pre-pandemic levels by 1,298 per month, while ED transports exceeded by 543 per month. The pandemic significantly reduced monthly 9-1-1 calls (-588. 2, 95% CI -928. 8 to -247. 5) and ED transports (-677. 3, 95% CI -927. 0 to -427. 5). Post-pandemic, there was a significant and sustained resurgence in monthly 9-1-1 calls (1,208. 0, 95% CI 822. 1 to 1,593. 9) and ED transports (868. 8, 95% CI 585. 8 to 1,151. 7). Both models exhibited seasonal variations. Post-pandemic, 9-1-1-initiated paramedic calls experienced a substantial increase, surpassing pre-pandemic growth rates. ED transports returned to pre-pandemic levels but with a steeper and continuous pattern of growth. The resurgence in paramedic 9-1-1 calls and ED transports post-COVID-19 emphasizes an urgent necessity to expedite development of new care models that address how paramedics respond to 9-1-1 calls and transport to overcrowded EDs.

Concepts Keywords
Overcrowded Calls
Paramedic Covid
Seasonal Ed
Emergency
Growth
January
Pandemic
Paramedic
Paramedics
Post
Pre
Rates
Services
Transports
Utilization

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH Emergency
disease MESH COVID-19
disease VO time
disease VO monthly
disease VO Optaflu

Original Article

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