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Article ; Online: Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion in the United States Emergency Medical Services Workforce: A Scoping Review.

Rudman, Jordan S / Farcas, Andra / Salazar, Gilberto A / Hoff, J J / Crowe, Remle P / Whitten-Chung, Kimberly / Torres, Gilberto / Pereira, Carolina / Hill, Eric / Jafri, Shazil / Page, David I / von Isenburg, Megan / Haamid, Ameera / Joiner, Anjni P

Prehospital emergency care

2022  Volume 27, Issue 4, Page(s) 385–397

Abstract: Objective: Emergency medical services (EMS) workforce demographics in the United States do not reflect the diversity of the population served. Despite some efforts by professional organizations to create a more representative workforce, little has ... ...

Abstract Objective: Emergency medical services (EMS) workforce demographics in the United States do not reflect the diversity of the population served. Despite some efforts by professional organizations to create a more representative workforce, little has changed in the last decade. This scoping review aims to summarize existing literature on the demographic composition, recruitment, retention, and workplace experience of underrepresented groups within EMS.
Methods: Peer-reviewed studies were obtained from a search of PubMed, CINAHL, Web of Science, ProQuest Thesis and Dissertations, and non-peer-reviewed ("gray") literature from 1960 to present. Abstracts and included full-text articles were screened by two independent reviewers trained on inclusion/exclusion criteria. Studies were included if they pertained to the demographics, training, hiring, retention, promotion, compensation, or workplace experience of underrepresented groups in United States EMS by race, ethnicity, sexual orientation, or gender. Studies of non-EMS fire department activities were excluded. Disputes were resolved by two authors. A single reviewer screened the gray literature. Data extraction was performed using a standardized electronic form. Results were summarized qualitatively.
Results: We identified 87 relevant full-text articles from the peer-reviewed literature and 250 items of gray literature. Primary themes emerging from peer-reviewed literature included workplace experience (n = 48), demographics (n = 12), workforce entry and exit (n = 8), education and testing (n = 7), compensation and benefits (n = 5), and leadership, mentorship, and promotion (n = 4). Most articles focused on sex/gender comparisons (65/87, 75%), followed by race/ethnicity comparisons (42/87, 48%). Few articles examined sexual orientation (3/87, 3%). One study focused on telecommunicators and three included EMS physicians. Most studies (n = 60, 69%) were published in the last decade. In the gray literature, media articles (216/250, 86%) demonstrated significant industry discourse surrounding these primary themes.
Conclusions: Existing EMS workforce research demonstrates continued underrepresentation of women and nonwhite personnel. Additionally, these studies raise concerns for pervasive negative workplace experiences including sexual harassment and factors that negatively affect recruitment and retention, including bias in candidate testing, a gender pay gap, and unequal promotion opportunities. Additional research is needed to elucidate recruitment and retention program efficacy, the demographic composition of EMS leadership, and the prevalence of racial harassment and discrimination in this workforce.
MeSH term(s) Humans ; Male ; Female ; United States ; Emergency Medical Services ; Diversity, Equity, Inclusion ; Workforce ; Ethnicity ; Workplace
Language English
Publishing date 2022-10-24
Publishing country England
Document type Review ; Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
ZDB-ID 1461751-1
ISSN 1545-0066 ; 1090-3127
ISSN (online) 1545-0066
ISSN 1090-3127
DOI 10.1080/10903127.2022.2130485
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Zs.A 4762: Show issues Location:
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Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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