Greetings Everyone
From the State:
NYS NEMSIS 3.5.0 | Educational Snip #2024-002
The Data and Informatics (DI) Unit at the Bureau of EMS & Trauma Systems is sending weekly Educational Snips highlighting various NEMSIS fields. Our goal is to help providers reduce documentation errors and warnings requiring adjustment throughout documentation by getting ahead of them. Each Educational Snip will start with a question, an outline of various fields, and elements (answers) within those fields. We are providing the NEMSIS named elements; the ePCR software used by your EMS agency might look different, and you should have custom values selected by the Department of Health available to you. If you have questions about specific documentation scenarios or if you would like clarification on particular data elements, please reach out to your organization’s leadership, Regional Program Agencies, or the DI Unit.
EMS agencies credentialed by New York State are now submitting ePCRs that adhere to the National Emergency Medical Services Information System (NEMSIS) 3.5 documentation standard. NEMSIS establishes a minimum documentation standard that requires fields that must be completed on an ePCR and NYS further defines these requirements to meet minimal additional requirements. Standardized documentation improves quality documentation. Measuring provider effectiveness, system efficiency, and patient outcomes is paramount to the success of EMS organizations across New York State.
The DI Unit will be holding monthly NEMSIS 3.5 ePCR briefings via Webex. In these briefings, issues that EMS agencies commonly face will be addressed. EMS providers will have the opportunity to ask any questions or raise any concerns about 3.5 submission criteria they wish. Feedback from these briefings are vital for their ongoing success. If you are an EMS provider, an EMS leader, an EMS medical director, or a software vendor who attends these meetings, please fill out a survey through this link. Choose the ‘Data and Informatics’ option in the filter list, then under the ‘Surveys’ section of the page choose the survey link which applies to you.
Q: How has the documentation of trauma elements changed from NEMSIS 3.4 to NEMSIS 3.5?
Note: all fields are named by NEMSIS with the Field Name (Field Identifier) (e.g. Incident / Patient Disposition (eDisposition.12)
Trauma element names were changed, and new values were added to reflect the 2021 American College of Surgeons National Guideline for the Field Triage of Injured Patients
- Trauma Center Criteria (eInjury.03) is now Trauma Triage Criteria (Steps 1 and 2)
- Vehicular, Pedestrian, or Other Injury Risk Factor (eInjury.04) is now Trauma Triage Criteria (Steps 3 and 4)
Important: eInjury.03 and eInjury.04 MUST be documented, when Possible Injury (eSituation.02) is “Yes.” Otherwise, these elements should not be recorded. Pertinent negatives are acceptable.
Trauma Triage Criteria (Steps 1 and 2) eInjury.03 – High Risk for Serious Injury
21 response options and is required by NYS. If you report that the patient has a possible injury, then “not applicable” is NOT an appropriate answer to the risk factor list. In other words, you must triage your patient for trauma criteria when they are injured, and thus if they lack any high-risk factors for serious injury in the list below the appropriate answer is a pertinent negative: “none reported”.
- Amputation proximal to wrist or ankle
- Crushed, degloved, mangled, or pulseless extremity
- Chest wall instability, deformity, or suspected flail chest
- Skull deformity, suspected skull fracture
- Suspected pelvic fracture
- Penetrating injuries to head, neck, torso, and proximal extremities
- Respiratory Rate <10 or >29 breaths per minute (<20 in infants aged <1 year) or need for ventilatory support
- Suspected fracture of two or more proximal long bones
- Active bleeding requiring a tourniquet or wound packing with continuous pressure
- Age >= 10 years: HR > SBP
- Age >= 65 years: SBP < 110 mmHg
- Age 0-9 years: SBP < 70 mmHg + (2 x age in years)
- Age 10-64 years: SBP < 90 mmHg
- Respiratory distress or need for respiratory support
- Room-air pulse oximetry < 90%
- RR < 10 or > 29 breaths/min
- Suspected spinal injury with new motor or sensory loss
- Unable to follow commands (motor GCS < 6)
Trauma Triage Criteria (Steps 3 and 4) eInjury.04 – Moderate Risk for Serious Injury
20 response options and is required by NYS. Again, when you answer “yes” to “Possible Injury”, you must report whether your patient has any moderate risks for serious injury. If they lack any of the options listed below, the appropriate pertinent negative is “none reported”.
- Pedestrian/bicycle rider thrown, run over, or with significant impact.
- Auto Crash: Death in passenger compartment
- Auto Crash: Partial or complete ejection
- Auto Crash: Significant intrusion (including roof): > 12 inches occupant site; > 18 inches any site; need for extrication
- Auto Crash: Vehicle telemetry data consistent with severe injury
- Vehicle v. Pedestrian or Motorcycle Crash > 20 MPH
- SBP < 110 for age > 65
- Anticoagulant use
- Pregnancy > 20 weeks
- Other EMS judgement
- Burns in conjunction with trauma
- Auto Crash: Child (age 0-9 years) unrestrained or in unsecured child safety seat
- Fall from height > 10 feet (all ages)
- Low-level falls in young children (age<=5 years) or older adults (age>=65 years) with significant head impact
- Rider separated from transport vehicle with significant impact (eg, motorcycle, ATV, horse, etc.)
- Special, high-resource healthcare needs
- Suspicion of child abuse
Additional Information on the American College of Surgeons Trauma Triage Criteria can be found through the American College of Surgeons website: Field Triage Guidelines | ACS (facs.org)
On ACS Website: Red Criteria pertains to eInjury.03 and Yellow Criteria pertains to eInjury.04.