TY - JOUR
T1 - Tracheal Intubation in Emergency Departments in China
T2 - A National Cross-Sectional Survey
AU - Dai, Yili
AU - Walline, Joseph Harold
AU - Yu, Heng
AU - Zhu, Huadong
AU - Xu, Jun
AU - Yu, Xuezhong
N1 - Funding Information:
We would like to thank professor Xia Wan for her statistical analysis advice on this manuscript. We are grateful to the CAMS (Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences) Innovation Fund for Medical Sciences grant for supporting our investigation. Finally, we would like to thank Aijun Qu, Baofeng Zhu, Caixia Li, Chen Hong-Yi, Cheng Jiang, Danni Li, Danping Liu, Danwen Zheng, Fenqiao Chen, Guangliang Hong, Hai yan Yang, Haichen Yang, Hui Li, Jianzhong Yang, Jin Li, Jingjun Lyu, Kai Niu, Liao Wenjie, Lili Yang, LiPing Zhou, Lishan Yang, Liu Hong-xuan, Liu Tao, Liwen Gu, Liying Cheng, Lu Lin-xin, Lu Ye, Ning Ning Tao, Qin Song, Ruilan Wang, Shuzhen Bi, Sun Ming, Tao Jiang, Tian Ying-ping, Wang Hong, Wang Shanshan, Wenzhong Zhang, Wu Chao, Xianyu Mu, Xiaozhen Jiang, Xinpeng Lv, Xinyan Zhang, Xu Xiao-Long, Xue Zhan, Yan Li, Yan Shi, Yanan Gu, Yao Dong-qi, Ying Deng, Yingying Hu, Zheng Fen-shuang, and Yi Wang for their help in enrolling patients and assistance collecting data for this study.
Funding Information:
This trial was supported by the CAMS (Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences) Innovation Fund for Medical Sciences (Project number 2017-I2M-1-009).
Funding Information:
We would like to thank professor Xia Wan for her statistical analysis advice on this manuscript. We are grateful to the CAMS (Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences) Innovation Fund for Medical Sciences grant for supporting our investigation. Finally, we would like to thank Aijun Qu, Baofeng Zhu, Caixia Li, Chen Hong-Yi, Cheng Jiang, Danni Li, Danping Liu, Danwen Zheng, Fenqiao Chen, Guangliang Hong, Hai yan Yang, Haichen Yang, Hui Li, Jianzhong Yang, Jin Li, Jingjun Lyu, Kai Niu, Liao Wenjie, Lili Yang, LiPing Zhou, Lishan Yang, Liu Hong-xuan, Liu Tao, Liwen Gu, Liying Cheng, Lu Lin-xin, Lu Ye, Ning Ning Tao, Qin Song, Ruilan Wang, Shuzhen Bi, Sun Ming, Tao Jiang, Tian Ying-ping, Wang Hong, Wang Shanshan, Wenzhong Zhang, Wu Chao, Xianyu Mu, Xiaozhen Jiang, Xinpeng Lv, Xinyan Zhang, Xu Xiao-Long, Xue Zhan, Yan Li, Yan Shi, Yanan Gu, Yao Dong-qi, Ying Deng, Yingying Hu, Zheng Fen-shuang, and Yi Wang for their help in enrolling patients and assistance collecting data for this study.
Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2022 Dai, Walline, Yu, Zhu, Xu and Yu.
PY - 2022/2/25
Y1 - 2022/2/25
N2 - Background: Tracheal intubation is a necessary but risky procedure performed in emergency departments (EDs) around the world. Relatively high morbidity has been encountered in Chinese EDs, which has raised concerns about peri-intubation ED management. This study aimed to investigate intubation procedures and identify any areas for improvement in Chinese EDs. Methods: This was a questionnaire-based survey lasting 1 month (March 2021) in 41 tertiary-care hospital EDs in mainland China. The primary outcome was complications associated with intubation. Secondary outcomes were the first-pass success rate and blood pressure variations during intubation. Univariate and binary logistic regression analyses were used to find possible risk factors for first-pass intubation failure. Results: In total, 1,020 replies were analyzed out of 1,080 surveys submitted (94.4% response rate). Most patients were elderly men with severe medical conditions like cardiac arrest (24.8%). In total, 97.2% of patients were given preoxygenation, and 48.1% received some form of pretreatment. Induction drugs (e.g., etomidate and ketamine) were less often used: 39.9% of intubations used sedatives, 5.5% used analgesics, and only 5.3% used muscle relaxants. The overall first-pass intubation success rate was 85.7% and was accompanied by a 19.8% adverse event rate. A marked decrease in blood pressure after intubation was also identified. Conclusion: This survey found an 85.7% tracheal intubation first-pass success rate (which is relatively high compared to other countries) and a 19.8% adverse event rate (which is also relatively high). Given the very low rate of using induction medications (5.3% used muscle relaxants), future education should focus on induction drugs and traditional intubation techniques.
AB - Background: Tracheal intubation is a necessary but risky procedure performed in emergency departments (EDs) around the world. Relatively high morbidity has been encountered in Chinese EDs, which has raised concerns about peri-intubation ED management. This study aimed to investigate intubation procedures and identify any areas for improvement in Chinese EDs. Methods: This was a questionnaire-based survey lasting 1 month (March 2021) in 41 tertiary-care hospital EDs in mainland China. The primary outcome was complications associated with intubation. Secondary outcomes were the first-pass success rate and blood pressure variations during intubation. Univariate and binary logistic regression analyses were used to find possible risk factors for first-pass intubation failure. Results: In total, 1,020 replies were analyzed out of 1,080 surveys submitted (94.4% response rate). Most patients were elderly men with severe medical conditions like cardiac arrest (24.8%). In total, 97.2% of patients were given preoxygenation, and 48.1% received some form of pretreatment. Induction drugs (e.g., etomidate and ketamine) were less often used: 39.9% of intubations used sedatives, 5.5% used analgesics, and only 5.3% used muscle relaxants. The overall first-pass intubation success rate was 85.7% and was accompanied by a 19.8% adverse event rate. A marked decrease in blood pressure after intubation was also identified. Conclusion: This survey found an 85.7% tracheal intubation first-pass success rate (which is relatively high compared to other countries) and a 19.8% adverse event rate (which is also relatively high). Given the very low rate of using induction medications (5.3% used muscle relaxants), future education should focus on induction drugs and traditional intubation techniques.
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U2 - 10.3389/fmed.2022.813833
DO - 10.3389/fmed.2022.813833
M3 - Article
C2 - 35280889
AN - SCOPUS:85126216858
SN - 2296-858X
VL - 9
JO - Frontiers in Medicine
JF - Frontiers in Medicine
M1 - 813833
ER -