Optimising medical retrieval processes and outcomes in remote areas in high-income countries: A scoping review.

Author(s)
Mathew S
Russell DJ
Fitts MS
Wakerman J
Honan, Bridget
Johnson, Richard
Zhao, Yuejen
Reeve d
Niclasen, Petra
Publication Date
2022-07-19
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: This scoping review explores the structure and process-level strategies that are associated with medical retrieval outcomes. A secondary aim is to identify the range of medical retrieval outcomes used to assess the performance of remote retrieval services. DESIGN: A scoping review of peer-reviewed literature from PubMed, CINAHL and the Web of Science was undertaken following guidelines set by the Johanna Briggs Institute manual for scoping reviews. All articles were assessed by two reviewers. Themes were derived inductively from the data extracted. SETTING: Medical retrievals in sparsely populated remote locations in high-income countries. PARTICIPANTS: Staff and clients of remote medical retrieval services. INTERVENTIONS: Structures and processes (e.g. resource availability, retrieval staff structures and governance protocols) that aimed to improve medical retrieval outcomes. OUTCOMES: Patient health outcomes and service efficiency. RESULTS: Twenty-four articles were included. Three broad themes, related to the nature of the interventions, were included: optimising prehospital management of retrievals, staffing and resourcing of retrieval services and retrieval model evaluation. Mortality was the most frequently used outcome indicator in these studies, but was not measured consistently across studies. CONCLUSIONS: This review highlights significant gaps in the literature that describes the structure and processes of retrieval models operating in remote areas and a dearth of literature evaluating specific operational strategies implemented within medical retrieval models. The available literature does not meaningfully assist with identifying key outcome indicators for developing a consistent monitoring and evaluation framework for retrieval services in geographically, culturally and demographically diverse remote contexts.
Affiliation
Menzies School of Health Research, Charles Darwin University, Alice Springs, Northern Territory, Australia.
Emergency and Retrieval Consultant, Medical Retrieval and Consultation Centre, Central Australian Retrieval Service, Alice Springs Hospital, Alice Springs, Northern Territory, Australia.
Population and Digital Health, Department of Health, Northern Territory Government, Darwin, Northern Territory, Australia.
Primary and Public Health Care, Central Australia Health Service, Department of Health, Northern Territory Government, Alice Springs, Northern Territory, Australia.
Central Australian Retrieval Service, Alice Springs Hospital, Alice Springs, Northern Territory, Australia.
Citation
Aust J Rural Health . 2022 Dec;30(6):842-857. doi: 10.1111/ajr.12908. Epub 2022 Jul 19.
OrcId
0000-0002-8078-3708
0000-0003-2221-7334
0000-0003-2839-5430
Pubmed ID
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35852929/?otool=iaurydwlib
Link
Title
Optimising medical retrieval processes and outcomes in remote areas in high-income countries: A scoping review.
Type of document
Journal Article
Entity Type
Publication

Files:

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