4.3 Article

Major challenges and barriers in clinical decision-making as perceived by emergency medical services personnel: a qualitative content analysis

Journal

BMC EMERGENCY MEDICINE
Volume 21, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12873-021-00408-4

Keywords

Clinical decision-making; Emergency medical services; Qualitative research

Funding

  1. Fasa University of Medical Sciences, Fasa, Iran [IR.FUMS.REC.1398.168]
  2. Fasa University of Medical Sciences

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This study explores the major challenges and barriers affecting clinical decision-making from the perspective of EMS personnel. Findings suggest that clinical knowledge, experience, and skills play a crucial role in decision-making, along with teamwork skills and time management. Effective clinical decision-making skills enhance resilience and adaptability to difficult and unpredictable conditions, while professional factors, organizational management, and ethical issues also impact decision-making and clinical performance quality.
Background Having to work in unpredictable and critical conditions, emergency care services (EMS) personnel experience complicated situations at the scene of accidents which, inevitably, influence their clinical decisions. There is a lack of research into the challenges which these professionals encounter. Accordingly, the present study aims to explore the major challenges and barriers which affect clinical decision-making from the perspective of EMS personnel. Methods The present study is a qualitative work with a content analysis approach. Selected via purposeful sampling, the subjects were 25 members of the EMS personnel in Iran who met the inclusion criteria. The study lasted from December 2019 to July 2020. Sampling was maintained to the point of data saturation. Data were collected using semi-structured, in-depth, individual interviews. The collected data were analyzed via qualitative content analysis. Results The results of data analysis were categorized into four themes and eight categories. The main themes were professional capabilities, occupational and environmental factors, inefficient organizational management, and ethical issues. Conclusion The results of the present study show that clinical knowledge, experience, and skills contribute to emergency care personnel's professional capabilities in making clinical decisions. Good teamwork skills and time management can prevent feelings of confusion when the number of the injured to be attended to is large. Effective clinical decision-making skills can not only help the personnel make the right decision, but enhances their resilience and enables them to adapt to hard and unpredictable conditions. Professional factors, organizational management, and ethical matters constitute the other major factors which influence the clinical decision-making of emergency care personnel at the scene of accidents and determine the quality of their clinical performance. Thus, it is essential that pre-hospital emergency care managers improve the quality of EMS personnel's clinical decision-making skill.

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