Ambulance dispatches to schools during a 5‐year period in Fukui Prefecture

  • Takinami Y
  • Maeda S
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Abstract

Aim: To determine the characteristics and trends of medical emergencies during school activities by analyzing information provided by fire departments. Methods: During a 5-year period from January 2009 to December 2013, all nine fire departments in Fukui Prefecture handled 850 emergencies at schools. We investigated the 850 cases with the age range of 0–63 years. Results: It was found that 21.5% of ambulance dispatches to schools were on weekends and there were more dispatches for non-faculty members of all age groups on weekends than on weekdays. The percentage of weekend dispatches was particularly high for students aged ≥19 years. Emergency calls for junior high school students and younger students accounted for the majority of weekday calls. There were a total of 524 ambulance dispatches for the three categories “sprains, contusions, dislocations, and fractures” (n = 245), “seizures, epilepsy, and syncope” (n = 171), and “cuts, bruises, lacerations, trauma, amputations, and burns” (n = 108), with dispatches for these three categories accounting for 61.6% of all dispatches. Almost all dispatches for “heat stroke and dehydration” were during school hours and were concentrated between the months of July and September. Heat stroke was most common among high school students and most often occurred during the summer/fall season and on weekends. Conclusion: Heat stroke was the fourth most frequent condition that required an ambulance dispatch after the above three conditions. Heat stroke is predictable, indicating that it is necessary to prevent heat stroke during high school club activities.

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Takinami, Y., & Maeda, S. (2017). Ambulance dispatches to schools during a 5‐year period in Fukui Prefecture. Acute Medicine & Surgery, 4(1), 46–51. https://doi.org/10.1002/ams2.226

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