KUMJ | VOL. 16 | NO. 1 | ISSUE 61 | JAN.-MARCH, 2018
Patient’s Mode of Transportation Presented in the Emergency Department of a Tertiary Care Centre, Kavre, Nepal
Shrestha SK, Koirala K, Amatya B
Abstract: Background
In many developing countries, emergency medical services, especially pre-hospital
emergency care, has long been neglected. It is the major obstacle for provision
of timely care. Patients are regularly brought to emergency department by the
relatives in taxis, bus or other readily available mode of transportation that lacks
emergency medical services. Development the Nepal Ambulance Service established
its first proper ambulance service in Nepal in 2011 and Dhulikhel Emergency Medical
Services in 2013 at Dhulikhel Hospital, Kathmandu University Hospital. Proper prehospital
emergence
medical
service
can
improve
survival
rates.
Objective
To determine the mode of transportation used by patients to arrive at the emergency
department and effectiveness of medical services specific to Dhulikhel Hospital,
Kavre, Nepal.
Method
In this study, 160 patients who arrived to emergency department during one-month
period were included. The emergency physicians and paramedics collected data on
a predesigned questionnaire regarding demographic details, mode of transport used
by the patients to arrive emergency department, reason for not using ambulance,
knowledge on emergency medical services at Dhulikhel Hospital and their
acceptability for those services.
Result
Mean age of the patients was 46±18 years and (52%) were men. Out of them, only
31% arrived to the emergency department by ambulance while the rest other
patients used other forms of transport such as private vehicles (21%), bus (16%), taxi
(13%), motorbike (11%) and van (7%). Among 50 patients who used ambulance, 24%
of the patients who used Dhulikhel Hospital ambulance received medical care and
trained medical staff services; all patients were satisfied with the services. 155 out of
160 patients mentioned the need of a trained medical personal in ambulance. The
mean duration for waiting time for ambulance was 33.78 minutes. The main reasons
to not using ambulance were they did not know the ambulance number, ability to
find other vehicles easily and having own private vehicle.
Conclusion
A prominent proportion of patients did not arrive by ambulance to the emergency
department and the main reason was that they didn’t know the number of ambulance
service. Developing three-digit phone number for ambulance service at the local level
will make people easier to remember and contact. Similarly, education and training
must be developed to improve emergency medical services. These strategies along
with team management of patients could significantly improve patient care in Nepal.
Keyword : Emergency care, Mode of transportation, Ambulance, Dhulikhel emergency medical services