Mental and behavioral health emergencies represent a large proportion of both pre-hospital and emergency department volumes with estimates ranging anywhere from 5-15% of Emergency Medical Services (EMS) call volume1 and up to 10% of emergency department (ED) visits each year.2 The term “EDP” or “emotionally disturbed person” has become popular amongst emergency services personnel and the term is used to encompass acute psychiatric conditions, intoxication with mind altering substances and for patients acting strangely due to significant medical decompensation. When an EDP call is dispatched, it is not uncommon for police to be the first on scene to ensure scene safety for EMS personnel, bystanders and the patients themselves. It is at this intersection of police, EMS, and EDPs that we have unfortunately identified a pattern of unnecessary patient deaths which have been more and more often found in the national spotlight. Cases of death in EMS or police custody as of late can often be found in the national news, with high profile lawsuits, payouts, and recently, with criminal charges to EMS and police involved.
There is one other significant factor that has been found to be interwoven with so many of these unfortunate encounters: the use of ketamine. Ketamine, a dissociative anesthetic, has had a meteoric rise in popularity over the past few decades in the emergency medicine (EM) and EMS worlds. It is a versatile medication, with indications ranging from procedural sedation, induction for intubation, pain control and in cases of EDPs, as a fast-acting chemical restraint.3 However, amidst the rising scrutiny against this medicine by the general public and the media demonizing it for its purported role in patient deaths, the question remains: is this medication safe?