The Prehospital Medical Information System (PreMIS) is an internet based EMS information system. The PreMIS system provides a data entry and reporting capability for the evaluation of EMS patient care and system performance. The system is in use by over 800 EMS agencies, 40,000 technicians, and maintains over 1,000,000 records per year. PreMIS functions beyond a medical record and quality management tool, in that hospital outcome data, billing data, and linkages to multiple databases outside EMS are encouraged.
Click Here to Log In to PreMIS Web if you Already Have your State ID and Password
Click Here if you are unsure about your State ID or how to log in to CIS or PreMIS Web
Click Here for PreMIS Web Training (Adobe Flash, 2.3 Mb)
Click Here for PreMIS Import Training (Adobe Flash, 1.8 Mb)
Click Here for the PreMIS Long Patient Handoff Form (Adobe PDF, 402 Kb)
Click Here for the PreMIS Short Patient Handoff Form (Adobe PDF, 67 Kb)
In 1996, The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) published the EMS Agenda for the Future. This is the most important modern EMS document to date in that it addresses EMS as a community based health management system, fully integrated with the overall health care system. Included in these documents were recommendations on the development of 14 distinct attributes of EMS (Table 1-4). The goal of the document was to result in more appropriate use of acute health care resources, and yet allow EMS to remain as the public's emergency medical safety net. One of the 14 components addressed in the document was Information Systems.
Five recommendations for information systems were issued from the EMS Agenda for the Future. EMS must adopt a uniform set of data elements and definitions to facilitate multi-system evaluations and collaborative research. EMS must develop mechanisms to generate and transmit data that is valid, reliable, and accurate. EMS must develop and refine information systems that describe the entire EMS event so that patient outcomes and cost-effective issues can be determined. EMS should collaborate with other health care providers and community resources to develop integrated information systems. Finally, information system users must provide feedback to those who generate data in the form of research results, quality improvement programs and evaluations.
In 1997, the National Center for Injury Prevention and Control published a document entitled Data Elements for Emergency Department Systems (DEEDS). This document was similar in concept to the EMS Data Set from NHTSA except it was targeting the emergency department. This document extended the concept of an information system by providing standards for data collection and linkages back to EMS and forward to hospital discharge.
At the state and/or national level, many other data sets have been implemented which have potential for EMS linkage and interaction. These include, but are not limited to the medical examiners database, which catalogues deaths, trauma registries, the vehicle accident reporting system through law enforcement, and the Crash Outcomes Data Evaluation System (CODES) through NHTSA. Each of these should be investigated with the development of any EMS information system.
Finally, NHTSA in 1998 produced a follow-up document to the EMS Agenda for the Future entitled The EMS Agenda for the Future Implementation Guide. This document took the 14 components of the original agenda and outlined suggestions or approaches to their development. Directly or indirectly, this document reinforces the need for a standardized information system for every one of the essential EMS components identified. The information system, in fact, is the backbone for the development of these components. The future of EMS will be based on information systems.
PreMIS follows the NEMSIS Standard Dataset located here: NEMSIS Dataset
The list of elements required for North Carolina by the North Carolina College of Emergency Physicians (NCCEP) are located here: NC Required Elements
The list of elements required for South Carolina is located here: SC Required Elements
The list of elements required for West Virginia is located here: WV Required Elements
Several PreMIS users have inquired about submission of PreMIS data and HIPAA compliance. State governmental (regulatory) agencies authorized by state law to collect and maintain identifiable health related data are considered exempt from the Health Information Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA).
Reports generated from PreMIS entries can be made through the Reports menu in CIS. Click on the Reports item in our main menu on the left of this screen for more information