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ORIGINAL RESEARCH article

Front. Public Health

Sec. Disaster and Emergency Medicine

Isolated Emergency Medical Incidents in the practice of Polish firefighters in 2020-2023: analysis of intervention causes

Provisionally accepted
  • 1Medical University of Warsaw, Warsaw, Poland
  • 2Department of Medical Rescue, Medical University of Warsaw, Poland, Warsaw, Poland
  • 3Department of Health Sciences, Poznan Medical Academy of Applied Sciences Mieszko I, Poznan, Poland, Poznań, Poland
  • 4Department of Agricultural Science, John Paul II University in Biala Podlaska, Poland, Biala Podlaska, Poland
  • 5Department of Geriatric Nursing, Medical University of Warsaw, Poland, Warsaw, Poland
  • 6Department of Oxyology and Emergency Care, Institute of Emergency Care, Pedagogy of Health and Nursing Sciences, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Pecs, Pécs, Hungary, Pesc, Hungary

The final, formatted version of the article will be published soon.

Objective: To quantify and characterise Isolated Emergency Medical Incidents (IEMIs) managed by National Firefighting and Rescue System (NFRS) units in Poland in 2020–2023 and to identify temporal and regional patterns. Materials and methods: Retrospective nationwide analysis of anonymised State Fire Service decision-support records. Inclusion required NFRS arrival before EMS, documented direct actions, duration over 1 minute, and dates 01.01.2020–31.12.2023. Descriptive statistics were compiled at the voivodeship level. Group differences were tested with Kruskal–Wallis and Dunn–Bonferroni procedures. Associations were examined with Spearman correlation. Visualisations included heat maps, box plots, and a choropleth. Seasonality was assessed by calendar quarter. Results: Approximately 2.25 million interventions were undertaken; medical rescue comprised about 35%. Regional heterogeneity was significant (χ² = 46.72; p < 0.001). Mean IEMI duration differed by year (χ² = 28.35; p < 0.001), peaking in 2021 and declining in 2022–2023 (medians 13–12 min). Pairwise contrasts showed 2020 > 2022 (p = 0.015), 2020 > 2023 (p = 0.001), 2021 > 2022 (p = 0.001), and 2021 > 2023 (p < 0.001). Minimum time did not correlate with the mean (ρ = 0.05; p = 0.7); maximum time did (ρ = 0.55; p < 0.001). Incident counts correlated with population (ρ = 0.518) and urbanisation (ρ = 0.446), modestly with number of EMS teams (ρ = 0.396), and weakly with area (ρ = 0.277). Q4 increases were consistent for cardiac arrest, unconsciousness, and dyspnoea; haemorrhage, choking, psychiatric disorders, and other showed no seasonality. Annual totals did not differ (H(3) = 1.83; p = 0.608). Conclusions: IEMIs form a stable share of NFRS activity, dominated by cardiac arrest, syncope, trauma, and neurological disorders, with a Q4 peak. Seasonal readiness in October– December, targeted QFA training on CPR/AED, resource allocation by per capita and urbanisation metrics, early activation thresholds, standardised winter workflows, and quarterly quality monitoring may improve timeliness and reduce demand.

Keywords: Firefighting and rescue operations, EMS support, IEMI, QFA, NFRs

Received: 09 Oct 2025; Accepted: 24 Nov 2025.

Copyright: © 2025 Dudziński, Kubiak, Gałązkowski, Grochowska, Czyzewski and Attila. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

* Correspondence: Łukasz Dudziński

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