Farmers with acute chest pain are uncertain how and when to seek help

A pilot study of the prevalence of cardiac risk factors in a group of agricultural workers and of their decision-making abilities with regard to when and how they would seek help when experiencing chest pain has found that most put themselves at risk of dying.

Researchers Dr Tim Baker, (Centre for Rural Emergency Medicine), and Scott McCombe, Cate Mercer-Grant, and Susan Brumby, from the National Centre for Farmer Health and Western District Health Service, studied almost 200 farm men and women recruited from 20 rural Victorian sites. The farmers underwent health assessments for total cholesterol, blood glucose, weight, height and blood pressure, and they completed a survey to determine their knowledge of chest pain treatment, local emergency services, and likely response to chest pain.

In this study, researchers found that 61% of the farmers had cardiac risk factors, with 61% of men and 74% of women either overweight or obese. When asked to name their nearest ED, 10% of participants nominated health services or towns where no ED exists. Sixty seven percent of respondents believed it was safe to travel to hospital by car while potentially having a myocardial infarction.

Improving health literacy among farm men and women is of the utmost importance as they have higher rates of clinical risk factors and appear to be lagging in emergency knowledge and services when compared with their urban and regional counterparts, the researchers maintain.

Read more: Access article on publisher’s site

Baker, T., McCoombe, S., Mercer-Grant, C. and Brumby, S. (2011), Chest pain in rural communities; balancing decisions and distance. Emergency Medicine Australasia, 23: 337–345. doi: 10.1111/j.1742-6723.2011.01412.x

Out of hours radiology

March 2011

EDbed

Introduction

Although Rural Emergency Departments operate 24 hours a day, not all hospital resources can do the same. In order to maximize the number of daytime radiographers, a reduced service is often in place after hours. Deciding to call in a radiographer at night may reduce the number of radiographers available the next day.

Unfortunately there is little research to base out of hours radiology guidelines on. Nobody really knows which images can be safely delayed until morning. The best that can be done is to see what has worked in other rural hospitals.

These guidelines were originally written for Portland District Hospital in Western Victoria. Portland is a town of 10,000 people on the South West Victorian coast, four hours drive from the capital city and over one hour drive to the nearest regional centre. The hospital has 69 beds, and the Emergency Department sees 9000 patients annually. The radiology facilities available between nine AM and five PM on weekdays include X-rays, CT scans and ultrasound. The radiographer is on call from home after these hours and on public holidays. There is no onsite radiologist, but opinions are obtainable by telemedicine 24 hours each day.

 Principles

Radiographic imaging should only be ordered at night if it will significantly change the management of a patient. Positive images that confirm a diagnosis and negative images that exclude a diagnosis can both be useful. Radiographs should be ordered if a delay in imaging could adversely affect patient outcome. This can occur when uncertain diagnosis or inability to exclude important diagnoses result in

1. Delayed critical treatment  

– Example: Confirming air under the diaphragm prior to laparotomy

2. Delayed critical investigation 

– Example: excluding asymmetrical ICP rise prior to lumbar puncture

3. Delayed transport to critical care services  

– Example: excluding pneumothorax prior to trauma transport by air

4. Delayed transport for urgent surgery  

– Example: confirming fracture type underlying open wound

5. Prolonged patient pain because treatment cannot be initiated 

– Example: confirming first dislocation of shoulder prior to reduction

6. Prolonged patient pain because treatments cannot be removed 

– Example: Many hours in cervical collar when it could be removed if imaging showed no fracture

Approval

Several options are available

1. Emergency department staff can order any image, using this protocol as a guide 

2. All image requests have to be cleared by the radiologist 

3. Requests in accordance with this protocol  can be ordered without radiologist approval. Borderline cases or cases outside the parameters of this guide have to be cleared by a radiologist. This is the option chosen by Portland District Hospital.

Weekends and public holidays

These are officially out of hours, but sometimes it is inappropriate for patients seen on Friday night to wait for two days for their imaging. This is particularly problematic on long weekends. For this reason, consider a system where  a number of patients may be brought back on a weekend afternoon who do not strictly meet the after hours parameters. An example of this would be a deformed wrist fracture: Imaging can wait until morning, but should not wait for two days.

Trauma imaging

Portland is designated as an Urgent Care Service in Victoria’s Trauma system. It is tasked with rapidly assessing and stabilizing trauma patients and then moving them quickly to definitive care. Delayed diagnosis of traumatic injury, especially head injury or occult bleeding increases the likelihood of an adverse outcome.

Urgent radiology is indicated for

• Any trauma meeting major trauma criteria

• Head injury with any of the following

– Focal neurology

– Glasgow Coma Score < 14 (even if possibly due to intoxication)

– Severe headache

– Anticoagulant use (will need rescan at 24 hours also)

• Neck injury with any of the following

– Focal neurology

– Severe neck pain

– Inability to maintain c-spine precautions due to poor patient compliance

– Significant patient discomfort due to hard collar when delay in imaging is likely to be many hours.

• Chest trauma with any of the following

– Respiratory distress

– Hypoxia

– Significant pain

– Significant chest wall or sternal tenderness

• Abdominal trauma with any of the following

– Rebound or guarding

– Hypotension or tachycardia

– Macroscopic haematuria

• Pelvic trauma with

– Pain on pelvic springing

Urgent radiology is seldom indicated for

• Mild symptoms in low impact injury

• Intoxicated patients (GCS14) tolerating the hard collar, where intoxication precludes collar removal, even with a clear CT scan

Respiratory imaging

It can be difficult to diagnose the underlying cause for a patient’s respiratory distress. As treatments can be quite different (diuretics, anticoagulants, bronchodilators), it is important to make the diagnosis as soon as possible. Certain diagnoses (such as pneumothorax or large pleural effusion) can be treated immediately if they can be confirmed.

Urgent radiology is indicated for

• Shortness of breath of uncertain diagnosis with any of the following

– Increased work of breathing

– Tachypnoea

– New hypoxia (saturation < 95%)

• Possible pneumothorax

• Possible thoracic dissection

• Possible large pleural effusion requiring urgent aspiration (and post aspiration film also)

Urgent radiology is seldom indicated for

• Shortness of breath were the patient is not in respiratory distress

– Example: Probable mild to moderate pneumonia

• Shortness of breath where the diagnosis is certain and the patient is improving

– Example: acute asthma

• Possible pulmonary embolus where the patient is stable

– Unless the patient has a high risk of bleeding, the patient can be anticoagulated and imaged the next day

Abdominal imaging

Unless the diagnosis under consideration is likely to require immediate surgery, imaging can be delayed. It is often sensible to discuss the case with surgical staff prior to imaging.

Urgent radiology is indicated for

• Acute abdomen

– Obtain surgical advice. Immediate transfer or operation may be a better option

• Possible organ rupture

• Possible volvulus

• Possible leaking aortic aneurysm

• Possible ectopic pregnancy

• Unfortunately out of hours ultrasound is not available in many rural hospitals. The patient will need to be transferred

Urgent radiology is seldom indicated for

• Abdominal pain with localised abdominal signs

Orthopaedic imaging

Most patients with limb fractures can be made comfortable with splinting and analgesia. They can return the next day for x-ray. Even moderately displaced fractures are unlikely to be operated on after hours. They should also be splinted, but the patient may need to remain in the emergency department until x-ray is available the next morning.

Urgent radiology is indicated for

• Open fractures

• Fractures with significant limb deformity or neurovascular compromise

• Possible dislocation, if immediate relocation is possible

– Patients with recurrent shoulder dislocation may sometimes be relocated without x-ray, and remain in the emergency department for a post reduction film in the morning

• Possible cauda equina syndrome

Urgent radiology is seldom indicated for

• Mild or moderately displaced fractures with little chance of neurovascular problems

• Suspected fractures

Neurological imaging

Urgent radiology is indicated for

• Cerebrovascular accident with any of the following

– Time since symptom free < 3 hours

– Possible intra-cerebral bleed

– Example: associated anticoagulation, hypertension, headache

– GCS < 14

– Deterioration

• Focal seizures

• Prior to lumbar puncture

– Discuss with consultant staff. CT is occasionally not needed

Urgent radiology is seldom indicated for

• Transient ischaemic attack, if symptoms resolved

• Post seizure, if patient is returning to normal GCS

• Syncope, without focal neurology or abnormal vital signs

Other imaging

In general, patients being transferred to intensive care should not have their imaging delayed. If a patient requires urgent transfer for surgery, but that cannot be arranged until imaging results are known, imaging may have to be performed out of hours.

Urgent radiology is indicated for

• Patients being transferred to a critical care bed or for urgent surgery

– Example: post central venous line placement

• Patients requiring anticoagulation, but require exclusion of bleeding

– Example: Possible pulmonary embolus and altered mental state – exclude intracerebral bleed

Urgent imaging is seldom required for

• Possible acute coronary syndrome, if chest is clear and the patient is not being transported

• Peripheral foreign bodies

Dr Tim Baker

Innovative link to medical specialists

May 2010

An innovative online program is bringing specialist medical support directly into the emergency department of Portland District Health.

The new monitor system connects patients in Portland to a network of skilled specialists around Victoria.

The new Datascope Panorama Central Monitor and Web Viewer allow doctors in Portland to consult specialists who will be able see and monitor their patients via on-screen images.

Centre for Rural Emergency Medicine Director and Portland Emergency Department Director, Dr Tim Baker, said the system would ensure patients get the very best care available.

Alcoa Australia has funded the new hardware and software through its Partnering Stronger Communities program.

Dr Baker said the equipment would collect a patient’s pulse, blood pressure, heart rhythm and breathing patterns and monitor trends such as falling blood pressure or increasing pulse rate. The web viewer makes the information available on a secure internet site.

Dr Baker said Portland hospital staff already consulted specialists from larger centres on a regular basis and transferred information such as X-rays and photographs.

“The Panorama weblink is the most important aspect of this telemedicine capability in that it provides direct access to the vital signs that are so important in assessing a critically ill patient,” he said.

Dr Baker said that doctors in rural hospitals such as Portland were often isolated from specialist support.

“Rural hospitals simple cannot employ every type of medical specialist and it is not uncommon to seek specialist support a few times per week. With the new monitor an emergency physician can now call for advice to and the specialist can see the patient and monitor their vital signs. As they say, a picture tells a thousand stories.”

“The specialist can log in and view streaming patient data remotely from virtually anywhere.”

It is expected the system will be used by the emergency physician on call for the Portland and Warrnambool hospitals, the Cardiology Unit at Geelong Hospital, the Alfred Hospital and the Adult Retrieval Service in Melbourne.

Dr Baker said it would be used for the safe care of patients with a variety of critical conditions or injuries and would be used to monitor patients waiting for transfer by air services to other hospitals.

Dr Baker said Alcoa’s support for the project was fantastic. “This equipment will save lives,” he said.

The Centre for Rural Emergency Medicine, which is based at Deakin University in Warrnambool, is also funded by Alcoa Australia in conjunction with the Department of Health.

Deakin research into regional head trauma

March 2010

A research project has started in south-west Victoria to find out why people who suffer major trauma head injuries recover better in city areas than in country regions.

Deakin University Warrnambool Campus PhD student Ben Fisk said there was a common belief that people injured in metropolitan areas fared better than those with comparable injuries in country areas.

“Anecdotally there seems to be different outcomes between city and country regions so our first task is to identify and analyse the existing data to see if that is the case,” Mr Fisk said.

The research will consider the total range of trauma head injuries from car crashes and home falls to farm and industrial accidents.

Mr Fisk said his research would investigate and report on possible factors which could influence the apparent imbalance.

“The most obvious would seem to be the time delay in getting injured people to treatment but there hasn’t been a study into the whole situation which will make the findings important for future planning.”

“The goal for this year is to create a picture of what is happening in Western Victoria and compare it to Melbourne.”

Mr Fisk comes from a paramedic background and has worked with the Victorian Ambulance Service in Geelong and Warrnambool for the past nine years. He hopes to use his research to learn more about pre-hospital management systems and how rural and regional people access and utilise ambulance services.

The impact of an emergency rescue helicopter in south-west Victoria will be considered in the three-year study. “There are not enough statistics yet in the south-west area to judge what impact it is having,” Mr Fisk said.

The research will also look at the processes when head trauma patients are taken to small country hospitals.

The research has been funded by the Windermere Foundation which provides special grants for the development, introduction and/or evaluation of new practices, models and interventions to improve health in country Victoria

Deakin University’s Warrnambool Campus Pro Vice-Chancellor (Rural and Regional) Professor Sue Kilpatrick and the Director of the Centre Rural Emergency Medicine Tim Baker are joint supervisors of the research.