Public Defence: Helge Eiding

Cand.med. Helge Eiding at Institute of Clinical Medicine will be defending the thesis “Interhospital transport of critically ill patients in Norway” for the degree of PhD (Philosophiae Doctor).

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Photo: Stiftelsen Norsk Luftambulanse 

Due to copyright issues, an electronic copy of the thesis must be ordered from the faculty. For the faculty to have time to process the order, the order must be received by the faculty at the latest 2 days before the public defence. Orders received later than 2 days before the defence will not be processed. After the public defence, please address any inquiries regarding the thesis to the candidate.

Trial Lecture – time and place

See Trial Lecture.

Adjudication committee

  • First opponent: Clinical Professor Annmarie Lassen, University of Southern Denmark, Odense
  • Second opponent: Professor Anne Berit Guttormsen, University of Bergen
  • Third member and chair of the evaluation committee: Professor II Tom Mala, University of Oslo

Chair of the Defence

Professor Johny Steinar Kongerud, University of Oslo

Principal Supervisor

Professor II Theresa Mariero Olasveengen, University of Oslo

Summary

The most severely ill patients, with failure in one or several organ systems and in need of critical care, are treated at the Intensive Care Unit. Sometimes these patients must be transferred to a higher level of intensive care for more specialised treatment and later transferred back to the referring hospital. These transports are performed daily throughout Norway, but there are no national standards for interhospital transport.

To examine and describe these transports in Norway, we obtained a triangulated view through questionnaires, in-depth-interviews, registration of incidents, and examination of databases.

These transports may drain the personnel resources at the local hospital. National guidelines regarding management of transport of critically ill patients were warranted. The participating personnel felt expected to participate despite sometimes limited education and competence, and there was a lack of guidelines.

Of two-hundred and ninety-four self-reported adverse events, only three were registered in the hospital`s electronic incident reporting system. An expert group were inconsistent in the grading of severity of the incidents and in their assessment of which incidents should have been reported. The review of all consecutive interhospital transports of critically ill patients to, from and between the intensive care units at Oslo University Hospital demonstrated the same morbidity and mortality compared to the total intensive care population in Norway.

Critically ill patients transported between hospitals should receive the same level of surveillance, critical care, and treatment during transport as in the intensive care unit. 
To increase the quality and safety of interhospital transport of critically ill patients in Norway, consensus based national guidelines or standards should be made and implemented. The personnel participating should receive systematic and experience-based education.

Additional information

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Published June 3, 2024 1:52 PM - Last modified June 14, 2024 3:59 PM