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Original Articles

Unnecessary Use of Red Lights and Sirens in Pediatric Transport

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Jeffrey L. Jarvis, Vaughn Hamilton, Mike Taigman & Lawrence H. Brown. (2021) Using Red Lights and Sirens for Emergency Ambulance Response: How Often Are Potentially Life-Saving Interventions Performed?. Prehospital Emergency Care 25:4, pages 549-555.
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Rebecca Duby, Matt Hansen, Garth Meckler, Barbara Skarica, William Lambert & Jeanne-Marie Guise. (2018) Safety Events in High Risk Prehospital Neonatal Calls. Prehospital Emergency Care 22:1, pages 34-40.
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Articles from other publishers (6)

Marc S. Schehadat, Guido Scherer, David A. Groneberg, Manfred Kaps & Michael H. K. Bendels. (2021) Outpatient care in acute and prehospital emergency medicine by emergency medical and patient transport service over a 10-year period: a retrospective study based on dispatch data from a German emergency medical dispatch centre (OFF-RESCUE). BMC Emergency Medicine 21:1.
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Kyle A Fratta, Jennifer N Fishe, Ellen Schenk & Jennifer F Anders. (2021) Emergency Medical Services Clinicians’ Pediatric Destination Decision-Making: A Qualitative Study. Cureus.
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Paul S. Jansson, Jeremy B. Richards, Michael A. Frakes, Jason E. Cohen & Susan R. Wilcox. (2020) The Effect of Lights and Sirens on Critical Care Transport Time. The Journal of Emergency Medicine 59:4, pages 553-560.
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Laura WestleyJanice NokesRanna A. Rozenfeld. (2020) Decreasing Usage of Lights and Sirens in an Urban Environment: A Quality Improvement Project. Pediatric Quality & Safety 5:2, pages e279.
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Carl Magnusson, Johan Herlitz, Thomas Karlsson, Maria Jiménez-Herrera & Christer Axelsson. (2019) The performance of the EMS triage (RETTS-p) and the agreement between the field assessment and final hospital diagnosis: a prospective observational study among children < 16 years. BMC Pediatrics 19:1.
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Brooke L. Watanabe, Gregory S. Patterson, James M. Kempema, Orlando Magallanes & Lawrence H. Brown. (2019) Is Use of Warning Lights and Sirens Associated With Increased Risk of Ambulance Crashes? A Contemporary Analysis Using National EMS Information System (NEMSIS) Data. Annals of Emergency Medicine 74:1, pages 101-109.
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