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Emergency Medical Technicians (EMTs) are the healthcare providers mandated to provide Emergency Medical Services (EMS) for patients with critical medical conditions outside a medical facility. This study assessed occupational hazards among EMTs of the National Ambulance Service (NAS) in Ghana. A descriptive cross-sectional study was carried out among EMTs to assess occupational hazards related to their work. The study used a multistage sampling technique; the country was clustered into Northern, Middle, and Southern; 7 regions (Ashanti, Greater Accra, Northern, Bono, Western, Oti, and Eastern regions) were purposively selected with all the service stations in these regions. A total of 59 NAS stations and 413 EMTs were recruited from February to November 2020. Participants self-administered a structured questionnaire based on different variables including their socio-demographic characteristics, occupational health, and injuries, health risk perception and knowledge in transporting Covid-19 cases. The data tool linked to a Google form was subsequently deployed unto the various WhatsApp platforms of the various NAS stations to download and self-administer and return same via entropic means for cloud storage. Out of the 400 respondents, 76.8% acknowledged occupational health hazards at work, 65.3% knew occupational hazards and 51% stated debriefing as their main coping strategy. Also, 71.2% and 77.75% of EMTs had good knowledge and attitude towards occupational health risks respectively. Meanwhile, 51.0% of EMTs had ever suffered injuries during work of which 83.2% indicated their health/body was affected and most 82.5% were diagnosed with back pain. Most 84.5% EMTs had training on transporting Covid-19 cases of which 77.0% had good knowledge in transporting Covid-19 cases. The study also showed a significant association between sex, marital status, religion, level of practice and educational level on knowledge of occupational risk (χ2=14.47, p<0.001), (χ2=33.86, p<0.001), (χ2=18.40, p<0.001), (χ2=12.83, p<0.001) and (χ2=41.65, p<0.001) respectively. The study thus concluded that most EMTs were aware of occupational health hazards issues in their work environment, and more than half had suffered from a form of occupational health hazard, mostly cuts and wounds, and stress. |
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