Study I

Study I · Peer-reviewed publication · BMJ Open

Stewarding scarce response capacity

An inductive qualitative interview study of emergency medical dispatchers prioritising ambulance resources.

Study profile

Dispatch as stewardship of scarce response capacity

The study explores how emergency medical dispatchers prioritise patients and steward ambulance resources when system capacity is constrained.

  • Article: Hill P, Lederman J, Jonsson D, Bolin P, Vicente V. Stewarding scarce response capacity: an inductive qualitative interview study of emergency medical dispatchers prioritising ambulance resources. BMJ Open. 2026.
  • DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2026-118269.
  • Design: Qualitative interview study using inductive qualitative content analysis.
  • Participants: Thirteen emergency medical dispatchers with at least one year of professional experience.
  • Setting: Swedish emergency medical communication centres operated by the national emergency call provider.
  • Main category: Stewarding scarce response capacity.
  • Key contribution: Dispatch under scarcity is framed as active stewardship of a safety-critical dispatch queue.
Core findings

How dispatchers sustain safety under scarcity

Prioritising within constraints

Dispatchers balance clinical urgency with geography, response capacity, unit availability, and the need to preserve coverage for future high-acuity events.

Governing a virtual waiting room

Queued cases are not a passive backlog. They require monitoring, reassessment, reprioritisation, escalation, and active governance over time.

Coordinating response capacity

Information systems, teamwork, interprofessional collaboration, and operational support help dispatchers maintain situational awareness during periods of constrained ambulance availability.

Scientific contribution

The dispatch queue as a safety-critical system

The study shifts attention from isolated dispatch decisions to the organisational conditions required to steward scarce response capacity safely.

Supporting dispatchers’ stewardship requires organisational structures and decision-support that make trade-offs visible, protect contextual judgement, and sustain follow-up of patients who must wait.

Queue governanceGeographic coverageReassessmentScarce capacitySystem resilience

Interpretation note

This qualitative study was conducted within the Swedish emergency medical dispatch context. Its contribution lies in conceptual and organisational understanding of dispatch work under scarcity, rather than statistical generalisation or operational automation.