Global Pediatric Health (Jul 2017)

Emergency Medical Service Personnel Recognize Pediatric Concussions

  • Joshua N. Speirs MD,
  • Matthew I. Lyons MD,
  • Bert E. Johansson MD, PhD

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/2333794X17719187
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4

Abstract

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Concussions are a major cause of morbidity in pediatrics. Many concussions occur during activities with emergency medical service (EMS) providers present to determine if a higher level of care is needed. Data are limited on how capable these providers are. We assessed the ability of EMS providers to recognize pediatric concussions. Fifty-six total responses were included, 38 from EMS and 18 from our MD/RN (medical doctor/registered nurse) group. No statistical differences were found between the 2 groups when adjusted for age, gender, number of years in practice, and number of pediatric concussions managed. This first of its kind pilot study was designed to assess EMS personnel’s ability to recognize and triage pediatric concussions. Our findings show EMS providers are statistically identical in their ability to recognize and triage concussions to physicians. The performance of our MD participants was lower than expected. Larger studies are needed to further investigate EMS providers’ ability to recognize a concussion.