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Thoughts on the Use of Continuous Positive Airway Pressure in the Field for Ventilatory Assistance October 14, 2011 San Francisco, CA. Raymond L. Fowler, M.D., FACEP. Professor of Emergency Medicine Co-Chair of the Section on EMS, Disaster Medicine, and Homeland Security
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Thoughts on the Use of Continuous Positive Airway Pressure in the Field for Ventilatory Assistance October 14, 2011 San Francisco, CA
Raymond L. Fowler, M.D., FACEP Professor of Emergency Medicine Co-Chair of the Section on EMS, Disaster Medicine, and Homeland Security -------------------- Chief of Operations The Dallas Metropolitan BioTel System -------------------- Attending Emergency Medicine Faculty Parkland Memorial Hospital
History: CPAP has been in regular use for over 50 years, mainly for weaning patients from mechanical ventilation. 1980’s – To treat sleep apnea
1985 AJC • ↓ Resp Rate • ↑ Oxygenation • Sl.↓ BP • Small Study
2000 AEM • Relatively new • “Small number qualify” • Only 11 patients
2003 PEC • 116 CPAP Patients • 2 intubated in field • ↓ Resp Rate 34 →28 • ↑ Oxygenation, Sl.↓ Pulse
2003 PEC • ↓ Resp Rate (34 →28) • ↑ Oxygenation (77 → 90) • Sl.↓ BP (173 → 166) • 12 of 116 ultimately intubated
2003 EJEM Prehospital Study, Pulmonary Edema 9 cm H2O Sl.↓ Resp. Rate 57 patients, 7 “excluded” 10 intubated within an hour
Essential features of • Field CPAP: • Portable so that it can be kept in • a respiratory kit and taken • into a patient’s home • Disposable • Can be left at the hospital • Can use nebulizers with it • Can suction through it
CPAP is quite a bit about treatment, but it is ALL ABOUT being a temporizing device
Patients on CPAP are generally so sick that they must be monitored constantly
Monitoring includes: • LOC • Airway • RR & L • Circulation (Pulse, BP) • General improvement or worsening • Pulse Oximetry • Capnography (if available???) • Possible need for slight sedation
Economic Advantages of • the Field Use of CPAP • 1000+ Uses per year in Dallas • Recurring cost of ~$60,000 • 300+ Intubations prevented at • $100,000 each = $30,000,000 / year • Morbidity and Mortality
Thoughts about cost savings • EMS bears the cost of product • Hospitals reap the overall decrease • in total patient charges • Working out a method that the hospitals • can help bear the cost of CPAP for the • transporting EMS agency is helpful
Field ventilatory assistance with CPAP is now accepted and essential
It is critical that standard quality control assessment be conducted following its use
Thank you for your kind attention…