1
ASHICE ASHICE is mnemonic acronym used to pass the important details of a patient’s condition to a receiving facility. 1 It is a radio reporting tool, NOT a handover tool. Age Patient's age in years or months Sex Male or female History What happened to the patient? (collapse, MVA, fall etc.) Injuries/Illness What injuries or illnesses? (fractured femur, laceration, chest pain etc.) Condition Vital signs (HR, BP, EtCO2 etc.) and pertinent interventions (chest compressions ongoing, analgesia provided etc.) ETA Estimated Time of Arrival to the hospital IMIST-AMBO IMIST-AMBO details the standard manner in which EMTs and paramedics should hand over information regarding a patient to ED clinicians or nursing staff. 2 IMIST-AMBO aligns with the ISBAR mnemonic for handover. Maintain a 20-30 second period where the patient remains on the stretcher and deliver IMIST information uninterrupted Encourage questions on completion of IMIST and again at the end of AMBO Treating EMT or paramedic to remain with the patient during handover Identification Identify the patient by name, gender, age Mechanism / Medical complaint Presenting problem and how it happened Injuries / Information related to the complaint Injuries found, symptoms, duration Signs Vital signs – HR, RR, BP, Temp, SpO2, BGL etc. Treatment and Trends Treatment administered and response to same ALLOW FOR QUESTIONS Allergies Any drug or other allergies the patient has Medication Regular medications, prescribed or illicit Background history Patients pertinent past medical history Other information e.g. social conditions, relatives, info from scene ALLOW FOR QUESTIONS References 1. Budd HR, Almond LM, Porter K. A survey of trauma alert criteria and handover practice in England and Wales. Emergency Medicine Journal : EMJ. 2007;24(4):302-304. 2. Iedema R, Ball C, Daly B, Young J, Green T, Middleton PM, Foster-Curry C, Jones M, Hoy S, Comerford D. Design and trial of a new ambulance-to-emergency department handover protocol: 'IMIST-AMBO'. BMJ Qual Saf. 2012 Aug;21(8):627-33

ASHICE and IMISTAMBO Overview

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: ASHICE and IMISTAMBO Overview

ASHICE ASHICE is mnemonic acronym used to pass the important details of a patient’s condition to a

receiving facility.1

It is a radio reporting tool, NOT a handover tool.

Age Patient's age in years or months

Sex Male or female

History What happened to the patient? (collapse, MVA, fall etc.)

Injuries/Illness What injuries or illnesses? (fractured femur, laceration, chest pain etc.)

Condition Vital signs (HR, BP, EtCO2 etc.) and pertinent interventions (chest compressions ongoing, analgesia provided etc.)

ETA Estimated Time of Arrival to the hospital

IMIST-AMBO IMIST-AMBO details the standard manner in which EMTs and paramedics should hand over

information regarding a patient to ED clinicians or nursing staff.2

IMIST-AMBO aligns with the ISBAR mnemonic for handover.

Maintain a 20-30 second period where the patient remains on the stretcher and deliver

IMIST information uninterrupted

Encourage questions on completion of IMIST and again at the end of AMBO

Treating EMT or paramedic to remain with the patient during handover

Identification Identify the patient by name, gender, age

Mechanism / Medical complaint Presenting problem and how it happened

Injuries / Information related to the complaint Injuries found, symptoms, duration

Signs Vital signs – HR, RR, BP, Temp, SpO2, BGL etc.

Treatment and Trends Treatment administered and response to same

ALLOW FOR QUESTIONS

Allergies Any drug or other allergies the patient has

Medication Regular medications, prescribed or illicit

Background history Patients pertinent past medical history

Other information e.g. social conditions, relatives, info from scene

ALLOW FOR QUESTIONS

References 1. Budd HR, Almond LM, Porter K. A survey of trauma alert criteria and handover practice in

England and Wales. Emergency Medicine Journal : EMJ. 2007;24(4):302-304.

2. Iedema R, Ball C, Daly B, Young J, Green T, Middleton PM, Foster-Curry C, Jones M, Hoy S,

Comerford D. Design and trial of a new ambulance-to-emergency department handover

protocol: 'IMIST-AMBO'. BMJ Qual Saf. 2012 Aug;21(8):627-33