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The Wheel
Reinvented
Introducing Version Eleven
By Brett Patterson, Council of Standards Reader & Curriculum Board
Editor; Robert Martin, Executive Director
The Medical Priority Dispatch System (MPDS) is always a work-in-progress.
Indeed, the Academy has been entrusted to continually reinvent the MPDS.
It is the world's most widely used 911-type Pre-Arrival Instruction and
Dispatch Life Support protocol system and has been credited with helping
save thousands of lives. Version 11 represents the single most comprehensive
upgrade in the history of the protocol. It is easier to use and full of
exciting new features designed to ensure safety and take better care of
patients.
In the immortal words of pseudo-rocker Nigel Tufnel, "The numbers
all go to eleven ...it's one louder, isn't it?" Indeed, version eleven
is one step louder, and one step clearer, and one step closer to being
perfect...again!
The MPDS is truly a worldwide protocol. The Academy has established several
International Standards Committees which are responsible for translating,
evaluating, approving, and adopting changes approved by the Council of
Standards.
There are currently nine different MPDS Version 10.3 language variants
available for online use which are now being updated to reflect Version
11: North American English, U.K./European English, N.Z./Australian English,
French Canadian, North American Spanish, European Spanish, German, Italian,
and Finnish.
The Academy's College of Fellows, through the various International Standards
Committees and ultimately the Council of Standards, has the exclusive
right to modify the core protocol content; however, licensed users are
individually responsible for establishing, maintaining, and reviewing
local response assignments, which necessarily vary from agency to agency.
MPDS Version 11 contains nearly 300 "Determinant Descriptors," which
are designed to categorize and prioritize emergency situations based upon
caller interrogation and the presence or likelihood of priority symptoms
and threat to life. It is important to note that scene circumstances may
change at anytime.
The MPDS is not meant to replace a thinking calltaker and cannot reasonably
be expected to predict outcomes or assure EMD compliance in all cases.
EMDs always have the option of overriding a recommended choice for patient
safety, or of reconfiguring a determinant code based on new information.
There are also times when the EMD may have to choose the most appropriate
telephone treatment options from several possibilities. These are issues
for consideration on a case-by-case basis, through local continuing dispatch
education, quality improvement, and medical control.
This article introduces and highlights the significant changes apparent
in MPDS Version 11. Anyone interested in better understanding how the
MPDS update process works is encouraged to attend an Academy-approved
EMD Certification Course, Version 11 Update Course, purchase the Version
11 Update Video and Workbook, as well as participate in the annual Navigator
EMD Conference.
Protocol Designations
The MPDS is distributed through the Academy's contract management organization,
Medical Priority Consultants, Inc., as either a software expert system
(ProQA(tm)) or as a manual flip card system comprised of reference card
pairs. For simplicity, in this guide we will refer to the MPDS as it is
represented in card form. The ProQA software follows the same numbering
schemes and area designations as the cards. There are a total of 90 cards
in a complete Version 11 set-a Case Entry pair, three cards for Case Exit
(X), 33 numbered Chief Complaint card pairs, six traditional Pre-Arrival
Instruction card pairs (designated A through F), a new pair for managing
Tracheostomy (Stoma) airway control and CPR (Y), a new series of four
cards for AED support (Z), and a "Response Determinant Methodology" instruction
card (which also shows the new Legend of Symbols).
For each of the 33 Chief Complaint pairs, one of the cards is referred
to as the Dispatch card and the other as the Additional Information card,
together comprising a protocol card pair. Each dispatch card consists
of Key Questions, Determinant Descriptors, Post-Dispatch Instructions,
Critical EMD Information, and Dispatch Life Support (DLS) Links. There
is extra space in the determinant area for listing each local response
assignment alongside its corresponding MPDS code. Each Additional Information
card consists of classifications, definitions, axioms, rules, and laws,
pertaining to that specific chief complaint.
Choosing a Chief Complaint Protocol
Due primarily to concerns about scene safety, many of the Chief Complaint
Protocols have been augmented to more appropriately address unconscious
or arrest situations. The Chief Complaint Protocols that may involve scene
safety issues now have specific directives within the Key Question sequence
to better accommodate these situations. In addition, specific Determinant
Descriptors and DLS Links have been added. Case Entry Rules 1, 2, and
3 clarify the proper selection of a Chief Complaint Protocol.
Using Symbols
Many new symbols have been incorporated into Version 11. These symbols
provide visual cues that serve to remind or direct you concerning important
issues. The new symbols can be placed in three basic categories, Notifications,
Directors, and Warnings. Notification symbols serve as reminders when
the needs of the call may require resources other than EMS. Directors
visually guide the EMD to accomplish a specific task, (i.e. verify an
address), or proceed to a specific point in the protocol, (i.e. send and
return to sequence). Warnings provide visual cues that remind the EMD
to consider important issues, (i.e. Critical EMD Information or Scene
Safety implications). These symbols are located throughout the protocol
and a "Legend of Symbols" is provided with each protocol set and reviewed
during each EMD certification course.
Fundamental Benefits
Having an EMD priority reference system is not just about knowing what
to say to an emergency caller, but also knowing how and when to say it.
Then, it's equally important to know how to appropriately apply the information
obtained from the caller. In a nutshell, MPDS Version 11 helps the EMD
accomplish all of this and more. It surpasses all previous versions and
"generic" variants in four primary ways. It is:
(1) more conversational,
(2) more directive,
(3) more clearly organized, and
(4) more medically correct and current.
All the changes apparent with Version 11 integrate to form a new product
that is fundamentally safer, more user-friendly, and easier to learn and
apply than previous versions-which quite simply equates to better patient
care and outcome.
First, terms and sentence structure throughout the protocol have been
changed to make questions and instructions more "conversational" and easier
for the layperson to understand (e.g. using "completely awake" rather
than "alert" when inquiring about a patient's level of consciousness).
In addition, the format of the Pre Arrival Instruction scripts has changed
to break up sentences into logical, more conversational segments. These
changes make the instructions easier and more natural to read, which fosters
consistency and compliance to protocol. This restructuring goes a long
way toward improving specifically "how" to ask potentially delicate questions
and in what order.
Second, more specific directives are included regarding protocol navigation
and specific instructions for the caller. Through text, symbols, and formatting
changes all Post-Dispatch Instructions are now more specific to the Chief
Complaint Protocol on which they are found and more generic instructions,
i.e. "Ensure ABCs", have been enhanced and placed within the new Case
Exit protocol (the "X" card) or redesigned Pre-Arrival protocols. The
EMD is now linked to these instructions, depending on the patient's condition,
via a new DLS Links section provided just below the Post Dispatch Instruction
area of each protocol. Cautions about potentially dangerous situations
and scene safety are also incorporated directly within each protocol and
linked whenever relevant.
Third, a comprehensive protocol overhaul afforded the Council of Standards
the opportunity to reorganize and re-order all the questions, determinants,
instructions, definitions, classifications, and other additional information.
The order of these components relates to priority, acuity, or protocol
navigation requirements. For example, Key Questions involving safety issues
are now all listed first, and questions involving priority symptoms or
those containing DELTA-level drivers follow. The clinical Determinant
Descriptors, have been reorganized to list high priority levels first,
and, when possible, individual descriptors are ordered to correspond with
the order of the Key Questions. At times, specific questions not related
to priority or acuity are asked first to determine if a SHUNT is appropriate,
(i.e. Protocol 5, Key Questions 1 and 2).
Finally, MPDS Version 11 is more medically correct and current. Indeed,
it represents a new standard of care for emergency medical dispatching
and call processing. As part of our systematic update and improvement
program, the Academy continues to work closely with other associations
and organizations to ensure that the MPDS embodies all generally accepted
medical and telecommunications industry practice standards.
Recognition of EMD standards have been promulgated by the American Society
for Testing and Materials (ASTM), the U.S. Dept. of Transportation, the
National Institutes of Health, the American Heart Assoc., the Canadian
Heart and Stroke Foundation, and the European Resuscitation Council, among
others. Incorporating all the appropriate international industry standards,
the MPDS represents the very core of vital and standardized knowledge
for the practicing EMD. Furthermore, the Academy has specifically dedicated
itself to continuing to support the MPDS protocol and to maintaining minimum
requirements and guidelines to accompany the EMD training, certification,
and accreditation processes.
Determinant Descriptors
As mentioned above, each MPDS-licensed agency is individually responsible
for establishing, maintaining, and reviewing local response assignments.
MPDS Determinant Descriptors (formaly called Sub-Determinants of Response
Levels) provide two primary advantages. First, they allow for locally
detailed referral and response assignments, making resource allocation
efficient and effective. Second, because the codes remain constant, they
provide the data that's essential for frequency and outcome studies, regionally,
nationally, and internationally.
Expanding and detailing these descriptors in Version 11 has afforded
EMS agencies opportunities to further customize their pre-planned assignments
and gather the information necessary to conduct related studies. Protocol
29 provides an excellent example of this Determinant Descriptor enhancement.
With Version 11 agencies now have the option of assigning a response with
"one unit" or "additional units" in situations effecting multiple victims.
Also, individual responses can now be assigned to subdescriptors within
the definitions of MAJOR INCIDENT and HIGH MECHANISM.
ECHO
One of the most exciting changes to be found in Version 11 is the addition
of the ECHO Level Determinant. Because ECHO Level dispatch is utilized
directly from Case Entry, this provides the EMD with the means to dispatch
earlier in the interrogation sequence -when certain life-threatening conditions
are clearly evident. This additional tier also provides each agency with
the means to assign response-capable units that would not normally respond
to typical EMS calls (i.e., AED-equipped fire or law enforcement vehicles,
HAZMAT, snorkel, or ladder crews). For easy reference, the Chief Complaint
Protocols which contain an ECHO-Level Determinant are highlighted with
a purple locator tab.
DLS Links and Case Exit (X)
The Case Exit protocol provides specific instructions for routine and
urgent disconnect situations, as well as instructions for situations where
remaining on the line with potentially unstable patients is prudent. These
instructions are provided in both 1st and 2nd party caller formats and
are accessed via standardized DLS Links from any protocol. The built-in
panel logic enables easy navigation from one instruction to the next,
depending on the situation or patient condition. Case Exit also provides
instructions for bleeding control, amputations, and cooling burns and
flushing chemicals. Instructions for handling as well as avoiding potentially
dangerous situations are also provided.
Y & Z Protocols
During the past few years many protocol change requests were received
regarding the provision of specific Pre-arrival Instructions for "special
cases," such as when an Automated External Defibrillator (AED) is present
during a cardiac arrest situation or when directing CPR on a patient with
an artificial airway (stoma). The new "Y" protocol for stoma patients
is a simple modification of protocol C. The instructions contain script
modifications to accommodate differences in airway maintenance and mouth-to-stoma
breathing. Similarly, the "Z" protocol serves as a companion to Protocol
C whenever an AED is available. The "Z" protocol was developed with the
help of representatives from the major AED manufacturers and the American
Heart Association and has been beta-tested in communities with a relatively
strong AED presence.
Making the Change
There are far too many changes within MPDS Version 11 to detail them all
without a formal training experience. The Case Entry Protocol, for example,
has changed dramatically with the addition of the ECHO Determinant and
Post-Dispatch Instructions. Some of the Additional Information protocols
have been almost entirely re-written. Since Version 11 is such a significant
advancement, unparalleled in the evolution of the protocol, the Academy
requires that each EMD be Version 11 "qualified" by the Academy before
initiating its use.
To accomplish this, all EMDs must successfully complete an Update Course
taught by a Version 11 qualified EMD Instructor or complete the Update
Course Video Training program. All EMDs must be provided with an Update
Course Workbook and submit the included Qualification Application to the
Academy. The purchase of the Workbook contains the processing fee and
each qualifying EMD will receive an official document substantiating their
Version 11 Qualification status. The Academy also recommends that each
EMD review every protocol in its entirety, several times, and continue
to study its contents until well understood.
In order to better accommodate transitions from previous versions of
the MPDS, Medical Priority Consultants, Inc. has developed several training
programs and options. For more information please call toll-free: (800)
363-9127, or (801) 363-9127, fax (801) 363-9144, or send email to: info@medicalpriority.com.
Brett Patterson: Brett is an Academics and Standards Associate
for Medical Priority Consultants, Inc. He is also the Editor of the Academy's
Curriculum Board and he serves as a member of the College of Fellows and
the Council of Standards. He is a 20-year paramedic with 13 years of experience
in the communications industry and is an accomplished speaker, educator,
and researcher and can be reached at BrettP@medicalpriority.com.
Robert L. Martin: Rob is Exec. Director of the Academy and has
been involved with publishing and coordinating Academy activities since
1988. He is a district board member for the International Association
of Business Communicators. He can be reached at Rob@emergencydispatch.org.
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