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Journal Article

Citation

Stendahl S, Rollgard L, Behm L, Rantala A. Scand. J. Trauma Resusc. Emerg. Med. 2023; 31(1): e17.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2023, Scandinavian Networking Group on Trauma and Emergency Management, Publisher Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group - BMC)

DOI

10.1186/s13049-023-01082-0

PMID

37020308

Abstract

BACKGROUND: As a result of several violent terrorist incidents, authorities in Sweden have shifted from previous approaches of being certain that it is safe for the ambulance service to enter the scene, to a one where "safe enough" is sufficient, potentially making it possible to save more lives. The aim was therefore to describe specialist ambulance nurses' perceptions of the new approach to assignments involving incidents with ongoing lethal violence.

METHODS: This interview study employed a descriptive qualitative design with a phenomenographic approach in accordance with Dahlgren and Fallsberg.

RESULTS: Five categories containing conceptual descriptions were developed from the analysis: Collaboration, Unsafe environments, Resources, Unequipped and Risk taking and self-protection.

CONCLUSIONS: The findings highlight the need to ensure that the ambulance service is a learning organisation, where clinicians with experience of an ongoing lethal violence event can pass on and share their knowledge with colleagues to prepare mentally for such an event. Potentially compromised security in the ambulance service when dispatched to ongoing lethal violence incidents needs to be addressed.


Language: en

Keywords

Police; Cooperation; Ambulance nurse; OLV; Ongoing lethal violence; Phenomenography; Prehospital emergency care; Qualitative approach; Rescue service

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