A comparison of australasian jurisdictional ambulance services’ paramedic clinical practice guidelines series : Adult anaphylaxis

Journal article


Wilkinson-Stokes, Matt, Rowland, Desiree, Spencer, Maddison, Maria, Sonja and Colbeck, Marc. (2021). A comparison of australasian jurisdictional ambulance services’ paramedic clinical practice guidelines series : Adult anaphylaxis. Australasian Journal of Paramedicine. 18, pp. 1-9. https://doi.org/10.33151/ajp.18.915
AuthorsWilkinson-Stokes, Matt, Rowland, Desiree, Spencer, Maddison, Maria, Sonja and Colbeck, Marc
Abstract

Introduction
This article forms part of a series that seeks to identify interjurisdictional differences in the scope of paramedic practice and, consequently, differences in patient treatment based on which jurisdiction a patient is geographically located within at the time of their complaint.

Methods
The current Clinical Practice Guidelines of each Australasian domestic jurisdictional ambulance service (JAS) were accessed during June 2020 and updated in August 2021. Content was extracted and verified by 18 paramedics or managers representing all 10 JASs.

Results
All JASs use intramuscular adrenaline as a first-line agent for adult anaphylaxis. Beyond this, significant differences exist in all treatments: five services provide nebulised adrenaline; 10 services provide adrenaline infusions (one requires doctor approval; one provides repeat boluses); six services provide nebulised salbutamol; two services provide salbutamol infusions (one requires doctor approval; one provides repeat boluses); five services provide nebulised ipratropium bromide; eight services provide corticosteroids (two restricted to intensive care paramedics (ICPs)); five services provide antihistamines for non-anaphylactic or post-anaphylactic reactions; four services provide glucagon (one requires doctor approval); magnesium is infused by ICPs in two services; 10 services allow unassisted intubation in anaphylactic arrest; one service allows ICPs to provide sedation-facilitated intubation or ketamine-only breathing intubation; eight services allow rapid sequence induction (two restricted to specialist roles).

Conclusion
The JASs in Australasia have each created unique treatment clinical practice guidelines that are heterogeneous in their treatments and scopes of practice. A review of the evidence underlying each intervention is appropriate to determining best practice.

Keywordsanaphylaxis; Australasia; emergency medical technician; guideline; paramedic; scope of practice
Year2021
JournalAustralasian Journal of Paramedicine
Journal citation18, pp. 1-9
PublisherParamedics Australasia
ISSN2202-7270
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.33151/ajp.18.915
Scopus EID2-s2.0-85115816449
Page range1-9
Publisher's version
License
All rights reserved
File Access Level
Controlled
Output statusPublished
Publication dates
Online01 Jan 2021
Publication process dates
Deposited17 Oct 2023
Permalink -

https://acuresearchbank.acu.edu.au/item/8zw16/a-comparison-of-australasian-jurisdictional-ambulance-services-paramedic-clinical-practice-guidelines-series-adult-anaphylaxis

Restricted files

Publisher's version

  • 22
    total views
  • 0
    total downloads
  • 0
    views this month
  • 0
    downloads this month
These values are for the period from 19th October 2020, when this repository was created.

Export as

Related outputs

Pediatric out-of-hospital cardiac arrests : An epidemiological study
Irvine, Rachel, Doan, Tan, Bosley, Emma, Colbeck, Marc and Bowles, Kelly-Ann. (2023). Pediatric out-of-hospital cardiac arrests : An epidemiological study. Prehospital Emergency Care. 27(6), pp. 718-727. https://doi.org/10.1080/10903127.2022.2096159
A comparison of australasian jurisdictional ambulance services’ paramedic clinical practice guidelines series: Adult sepsis
Wilkinson-Stokes, Matt, Ryan, Elena, Williams, Michael, Spencer, Maddison, Maria, Sonja and Colbeck, Marc. (2021). A comparison of australasian jurisdictional ambulance services’ paramedic clinical practice guidelines series: Adult sepsis. Australasian Journal of Paramedicine. 18, pp. 1-9. https://doi.org/10.33151/ajp.18.932
A comparison of Australasian jurisdictional ambulance services’ clinical practice guidelines series : An introduction
Wilkinson-Stokes, Matt, Maria, Sonja and Colbeck, Marc. (2021). A comparison of Australasian jurisdictional ambulance services’ clinical practice guidelines series : An introduction. Australasian Journal of Paramedicine. 18, pp. 1-5. https://doi.org/10.33151/ajp.18.914
Australasian paramedic clinical practice guidelines for managing cardiac arrest: An appraisal
Colbeck, Marc, Swain, Andrew, Gibson, Jonathan, Parker, Lachlan, Bailey, Paul, Burke, Paul, Caffey, Matthew and Kinnear, Frances. (2019). Australasian paramedic clinical practice guidelines for managing cardiac arrest: An appraisal. Australasian Journal of Paramedicine. 16, pp. 1 - 10. https://doi.org/10.33151/ajp.16.713
A comparative taxonomy of Australasian paramedic clinical practice guidelines
Marc Colbeck and Sonja Maria. (2018). A comparative taxonomy of Australasian paramedic clinical practice guidelines. Australasian Journal of Paramedicine. 15(3), pp. 1-11. https://doi.org/10.33151/ajp.15.3.611
The impact of essential fatty acid, B vitamins, vitamin C, magnesium and zinc supplementation on stress levels in women : A systematic review
McCabe, Delia, Lisy, Karolina, Lockwood, Craig and Colbeck, Marc. (2017). The impact of essential fatty acid, B vitamins, vitamin C, magnesium and zinc supplementation on stress levels in women : A systematic review. The JBI Database of Systematic Reviews and Implementation Reports. 15(2), pp. 402-453. https://doi.org/10.11124/JBISRIR-2016-002965
The effect of evidence-based, treatment-oriented, clinical practice guidelines on improving patient care outcomes: A systematic review protocol
Colbeck, Marc, Lockwood, Craig, Peters, Micah, Fulbrook, Paul and McCabe, Delia. (2016). The effect of evidence-based, treatment-oriented, clinical practice guidelines on improving patient care outcomes: A systematic review protocol. The JBI Database of Systematic Reviews and Implementation Reports. 14(6), pp. 42 - 51. https://doi.org/10.11124/JBISRIR-2016-002515
The Australasian consultant paramedic: a future direction?
Colbeck, Marc. (2014). The Australasian consultant paramedic: a future direction? Australasian Journal of Paramedicine. 11(5), pp. 1 - 3.