All Stories

  1. Ethical challenges and action alternatives: Case reflections in ambulance care
  2. Decision‐Making for Older Patients in Acute Prehospital Situations: A Scoping Review
  3. Case-Based Clinical Ethics Support – A Description and Normative Discussion of Methodological Issues from the Swedish Perspective
  4. Moral reasoning during vascular surgeons’ case conferences: finding the balance of risk and benefit by exploring the clinical details
  5. Paramedics’ attitudes toward elderly patients’ self-determination in emergency assignments: a US context
  6. Self‐determination in older patients: Experiences from nurse‐dominated ambulance services
  7. Nurses' use of an advisory decision support system in ambulance services: A qualitative study
  8. Family presence during in-hospital cardiopulmonary resuscitation: effects of an educational online intervention on self-confidence and attitudes of healthcare professionals
  9. Ambulance clinicians’ understanding of older patients’ self-determination: A vignette study
  10. Caring for older patients with reduced decision-making capacity: a deductive exploratory study of ambulance clinicians’ ethical competence
  11. Experiences of family‐witnessed cardiopulmonary resuscitation in hospital and its impact on life: An interview study with cardiac arrest survivors and their family members
  12. The onset of sepsis as experienced by patients and family members: A qualitative interview study
  13. Ambulance clinicians’ responsibility when encountering patients in a suicidal process
  14. Factors associated with treatment limitations in two Swedish intensive care units: Prevalence and patient involvement
  15. Sleep in cardiac arrest survivors
  16. Existential loneliness and life suffering in being a suicide survivor: a reflective lifeworld research study
  17. The ways specialist nursing students understand the work in the ambulance service - a national Swedish phenomenographic study
  18. Older patients’ autonomy when cared for at emergency departments
  19. Nurse preceptors' experience‐based strategies for supporting learning in the ambulance service—A combined focus group and dyadic interview study
  20. Symptom Prevalence of Anxiety and Depression in Older Cardiac Arrest Survivors: A Comparative Nationwide Register Study
  21. Treatment and survival following in-hospital cardiac arrest: does patient ethnicity matter?
  22. Ambulance clinicians’ attitudes to older patients’ self‐determination when the patient has impaired decision‐making ability: A Delphi study
  23. In-hospital family-witnessed resuscitation with a focus on the prevalence, processes, and outcomes of resuscitation: A retrospective observational cohort study
  24. UK consultants’ experiences of the decision-making process around referral to intensive care: an interview study
  25. Discriminatory cardiac arrest care? Patients with low socioeconomic status receive delayed cardiopulmonary resuscitation and are less likely to survive an in-hospital cardiac arrest
  26. Losing a close person following death by sudden cardiac arrest: Bereaved family members’ lived experiences
  27. Translation and further validation of a global rating scale for the assessment of clinical competence in prehospital emergency care
  28. Health-related quality of life after surviving an out-of-hospital compared to an in-hospital cardiac arrest: A Swedish population-based registry study
  29. Ethical conflicts in patient relationships: Experiences of ambulance nursing students
  30. Registered nurses’ experiences of near misses in ambulance care – A critical incident technique study
  31. Ambulance nurses’ experiences of patient relationships in urgent and emergency situations: A qualitative exploration
  32. Managers’ experiences of ethical problems in municipal elderly care: a qualitative study of written reflections as part of leadership training
  33. The early chain of care in bacteraemia patients: Early suspicion, treatment and survival in prehospital emergency care
  34. Factors associated with health-related quality of life among cardiac arrest survivors treated with an implantable cardioverter-defibrillator
  35. Lived experiences of surviving in‐hospital cardiac arrest
  36. Caring science research in the ambulance services: an integrative systematic review
  37. Relational autonomy in the care of the vulnerable: health care professionals’ reasoning in Moral Case Deliberation (MCD)
  38. Responsibility and compassion in prehospital support to survivors of suicide victim – Professionals’ experiences
  39. Ethical controversies in the process of formulating new national guidelines on cardiopulmonary resuscitation in Sweden
  40. Defibrillation before EMS arrival in western Sweden
  41. Health status and psychological distress among in-hospital cardiac arrest survivors in relation to gender
  42. The Early Chain of Care in Patients with Bacteraemia with the Emphasis on the Prehospital Setting
  43. Post cardiac arrest care and follow-up in Sweden – a national web-survey
  44. Determinants of pre-hospital pharmacological intervention and its association with outcome in acute myocardial infarction
  45. The impact of direct admission to a catheterisation lab/CCU in patients with ST-elevation myocardial infarction on the delay to reperfusion and early risk of death: results of a systematic review including meta-analysis
  46. Ethical values in emergency medical services
  47. Balancing Between Closeness and Distance: Emergency Medical Services Personnel’s Experiences of Caring for Families at Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest and Sudden Death
  48. Suspicion and treatment of severe sepsis. An overview of the prehospital chain of care
  49. Futile cardiopulmonary resuscitation for the benefit of others: An ethical analysis
  50. Experiencing Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest: Significant Others’ Lifeworld Perspective
  51. To Survive Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest: A Search for Meaning and Coherence