4.7 Article

Paramedic perspectives of job stress: Qualitative analysis of high-stress, high-stakes emergency medical situations

Journal

SOCIAL SCIENCE & MEDICINE
Volume 333, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2023.116177

Keywords

EMS; Prehospital care; Job stress; Lived experience; Qualitative interviews

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The time for ambulance paramedics to determine the differential diagnosis of a patient after receiving a 911 alarm notification is highly stressful, with high demand and low control. Through interviews with twenty paramedics across the United States, six categories were identified in their responses: pressure, overwhelm, emotional extremes, dissociation, multi-tasking, and disconnect. Understanding the unique stress experienced by paramedics in high-stakes situations is crucial for assessing the impact on judgment and care, and addressing these issues can reduce turnover and burnout among paramedics.
The time from when an ambulance paramedic receives the 911 alarm notification until they have determined the differential diagnosis of a patient is highly stressful. During this time, there is a high demand placed on the paramedic, and they have a low level of control. Recent advances in prehospital care that place more responsibility on paramedics have exacerbated this high-stress phenomenon. Twenty paramedics from across the United States were interviewed and evaluated using descriptive phenomenology to better understand one of the most stressful moments of high-stakes decision-making that paramedics regularly face. Using descriptive phenomenology, we identified six categories in the paramedics' interview responses: pressure, overwhelm, emotional extremes (with sub-categories of adrenaline rush and time-dilation), dissociation, multi-tasking, and disconnect. This analysis of the paramedic's lived experience of this high-stress, high-stakes phenomenon provides insight into how paramedics experience the unique stress of this phenomenon. This understanding is key to elucidating the effects of this acute stress that may impact the judgment and, ultimately, the care performed by the paramedic. Both early- and late-career paramedics from thirteen different states in all regions of the United States were interviewed. Further qualitative data from paramedics from a diverse range of regions and backgrounds are essential to identify ways in which to ameliorate the negative effects of acute stress experienced by paramedics. Addressing such issues will reduce turnover and burnout among paramedics.

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