Prehospital Agitation in 2026: A No-BS Playbook for EMS, LE, and Safety Teams (and Why EtCO2 Belongs on Every Sedated Patient)
BOTTOM LINE: A practical, evidence-informed playbook for managing prehospital agitation: de-escalation, safe restraint, med options (including ketamine), and the monitoring checklist that prevents bad outcomes.
Agitated patients burn time, blow staffing, and injure responders. They also crash fast when we get sloppy.
This isn’t a debate piece. It’s a field playbook you can hand to your crew, your security team, or your range cadre.
Bottom line: treat agitation like a medical problem until proven otherwise, and if you sedate, monitor like you mean it.
Who this is for
- EMS and Fire crews dealing with behavioral-health calls
- Patrol / corrections / tactical teams who end up “medical by default”
- Workplace, school, and church safety teams who may be first on scene until EMS arrives
Why this topic is hot right now (and why you should care)
National EMS trend data shows behavioral-health related responses rose from 9.8% (2023) to 11.7% (2025), which means more crews are walking into agitation scenes more often.ImageTrend
The same dataset highlights a quality gap: 72% of transported trauma patients had a documented pain score, but only 18% received pain medication.ImageTrend
Different problem, same lesson: we assess more than we treat, and when we do treat, we don’t always follow through with the monitoring and reassessment that keeps patients safe.
The real causes of “agitation” you must rule out
Agitation isn’t a diagnosis. In the field, it’s a symptom.
High-risk medical causes (don’t miss these)
- Hypoxia / hypercapnia
- Hypoglycemia
- Head injury / intracranial bleed
- Sepsis
- Toxidromes (stimulants, anticholinergic, withdrawal)
- Hyperthermia (especially stimulant intoxication + exertion + restraints)
Operational rule: if the patient is sweating, hot, fighting, and irrational—treat them like they’re critically ill, not “just combative.”
The scene plan: time, space, and manpower before meds
1) Slow it down (when you can)
- Call for help early (LE, additional EMS, supervisor)
- Create distance and reduce stimulation
- One calm voice. Everybody else shuts up.
2) Don’t turn it into a dogpile
Bad positioning kills. Avoid prone restraint and anything that compresses the chest/abdomen.
3) Set a trigger for escalation
Write this into your team SOP:
- “If the patient cannot be safely assessed/transported and is an immediate danger to self/others, escalate to chemical restraint per protocol.”
Restraint basics (what actually prevents injuries)
- Use enough people to control limbs without stacking bodies
- Avoid prone positioning; aim for lateral recovery when feasible
- If you must go supine, keep the airway accessible and the chest free
- Re-check distal circulation after restraints
Medication options: choose based on risk, not habit
You have three real buckets:
1) Benzodiazepines (fast, familiar; watch respiratory depression)
2) Antipsychotics (good for psychosis; often slower onset)
3) Ketamine (dissociative dosing) when violence is immediate and you need rapid control
Infographic: quick comparison

Ketamine for prehospital agitation: what the evidence-informed statements actually say
The American Academy of Emergency Medicine (AAEM) clinical practice statement (2024) supports ketamine as a safe and effective option for severe prehospital agitation when patient selection and dosing are appropriate.AAEM
AAEM also makes the “adult supervision” point clearly: EMS assessment and treatment decisions belong to EMS under medical direction, not law enforcement.AAEM
When ketamine makes sense
Per AAEM’s framing, consider ketamine when verbal de-escalation fails and the patient is uncontrollably violent with immediate risk to self/others or when agitation prevents evaluation of a potentially life-threatening condition.AAEM
When ketamine does not make sense
If the patient was reportedly combative earlier but is now calm enough to assess, AAEM advises not using ketamine solely based on that prior report.AAEM
What can go wrong (rare is not never)
AAEM notes rare but real complications: laryngospasm, hypersalivation, respiratory depression, and apnea.AAEM
Translation: if you give it, you own the airway.
EtCO2 isn’t optional: the monitoring standard after sedation
If you sedate an agitated patient, your biggest avoidable failure mode is not monitoring ventilation.
AAEM explicitly recommends that after ketamine (or any sedating medication used for agitation), ongoing monitoring should include cardiac, blood pressure, oxygen saturation, and end‑tidal CO2 monitoring as soon as possible.AAEM
Infographic: post-sedation monitoring checklist

A practical step-by-step field algorithm (print this)
Step 0: Safety and resources
- PPE on
- Call for additional units early
- Identify who is lead, who talks, who restrains, who monitors
Step 1: Quick medical screen
- Airway/breathing: look for hypoxia, cyanosis, poor chest rise
- Vitals when possible
- Glucose early if you can get it
- Temp if the patient is hot/sweating/struggling
Step 2: De-escalation attempt
- Calm voice, simple choices
- Reduce stimulation
- Avoid threats and “command voice” unless there’s immediate danger
Step 3: Physical control (if required)
- Controlled restraint with enough people
- Avoid prone; protect chest wall movement
- Check distal pulses after securing
Step 4: Chemical restraint (per protocol/medical direction)
- Choose agent based on safety risk, suspected cause, and transport time
- Prepare airway equipment before the dose lands
Step 5: Monitoring + reassessment loop
- SpO2 + waveform capnography (EtCO2)
- Cardiac monitor + BP trending
- Reassess sedation depth and ventilation continuously
What to put in an “agitation kit” (EMS unit, tac truck, security office)
You don’t need a rolling ICU. You need the right basics, staged.
- Waveform capnography (portable)
- Suction + BVM + OPA/NPA
- Pulse ox + BP cuff that actually fits
- Soft restraints
- Thermometer (yes)
- Glucose kit
MED‑TAC gear that fits this mission
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- Waveform capnography accessories (if carried in your system)
- Airway adjuncts and suction-ready pouches
- Restraint and patient movement solutions
- Preparedness/first-aid kits for workplace/school/church response
If you want this article to point to specific SKUs on tactical-medicine.com, provide your preferred product URLs and we’ll tighten the internal links.
Training notes: keep it clean and defensible
- Document the threat: harm to self/others, inability to assess, etc.
- Document alternatives attempted (verbal, time, distance)
- Document monitoring started and ongoing reassessments
Summary: the standard you want your team to hit
- Treat agitation as medical until proven otherwise
- Avoid chest-restricting positions
- Use chemical restraint only when necessary
- If you sedate, capnography and reassessment are the safety net
BUILD YOUR KIT
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Trauma Kits Tourniquets & HoldersLos pacientes agitados consumen tiempo, lesionan personal y se deterioran rápido cuando el manejo se hace “a medias”.
Esto no es un debate. Es una guía de campo.
Idea central: trate la agitación como un problema médico hasta demostrar lo contrario; y si seda, monitoree en serio.
Para quién es
- EMS y bomberos que responden a crisis de salud mental
- Patrullas / correccional / equipos tácticos
- Equipos de seguridad en empresas, escuelas e iglesias
Por qué este tema importa ahora
Datos nacionales de tendencias EMS muestran que las respuestas relacionadas con salud conductual subieron de 9.8% (2023) a 11.7% (2025), lo que significa más escenas con agitación para más equipos.ImageTrend
El mismo conjunto de datos muestra una brecha de calidad: 72% de pacientes traumatizados transportados tuvieron evaluación de dolor documentada, pero solo 18% recibieron medicación para dolor.ImageTrend
Lección: no basta con “hacer algo”. Hay que tratar y volver a evaluar, con monitoreo real.
Causas reales de “agitación” que debe descartar
La agitación es un síntoma.
Causas médicas de alto riesgo
- Hipoxia / hipercapnia
- Hipoglucemia
- Traumatismo craneal
- Sepsis
- Toxidromos (estimulantes, anticolinérgicos, abstinencia)
- Hipertermia (especialmente con estimulantes + esfuerzo + sujeción)
Regla operativa: si está caliente, sudoroso, luchando y confuso, trátelo como crítico.
Plan de escena: tiempo, espacio y personal antes de medicar
- Pida apoyo temprano
- Reduzca estímulos
- Una sola voz calmada
Sujeción: lo que realmente previene muertes y lesiones
- Evite posición prona
- No comprima tórax/abdomen
- Mantenga vía aérea accesible
- Revise perfusión distal tras colocar sujeciones
Opciones farmacológicas (decida por riesgo)
1) Benzodiacepinas
2) Antipsicóticos
3) Ketamina (dosis disociativa) cuando se necesita control rápido por violencia inmediata
Infografía: comparación rápida

Ketamina en agitación prehospitalaria: lo que dicen las declaraciones clínicas
La declaración clínica de la American Academy of Emergency Medicine (AAEM, 2024) considera a la ketamina una opción segura y efectiva para agitación severa en el entorno prehospitalario con selección adecuada del paciente y dosis correctas.AAEM
AAEM también enfatiza que la evaluación y tratamiento son responsabilidad de EMS bajo dirección médica, no de fuerzas del orden.AAEM
Indicaciones prácticas
Considere ketamina cuando falla la desescalada verbal y el paciente está incontrolablemente violento con riesgo inmediato, o cuando la agitación impide evaluar/tratar una condición potencialmente mortal.AAEM
Cuándo no usarla
Si el paciente ya está controlado y evaluable, AAEM indica no usar ketamina solo por reportes previos de agitación.AAEM
Complicaciones (raras pero reales)
AAEM menciona laringoespasmo, hipersalivación, depresión respiratoria y apnea como complicaciones raras.AAEM
EtCO2: el estándar de monitoreo después de sedación
AAEM recomienda que, después de ketamina (o cualquier sedante para agitación), el monitoreo incluya cardíaco, presión arterial, saturación de oxígeno y CO2 al final de la espiración (EtCO2) lo antes posible.AAEM
Infografía: lista mínima de monitoreo

Algoritmo práctico (para imprimir)
1) Seguridad y recursos
2) Evaluación médica rápida (vía aérea, respiración, glucosa, temperatura)
3) Desescalada verbal
4) Control físico sin comprometer ventilación
5) Sedación según protocolo y dirección médica
6) Monitoreo continuo + reevaluación
Qué incluir en un “kit de agitación”
- Capnografía con curva (EtCO2)
- Succión + BVM + OPA/NPA
- SpO2 + presión arterial
- Sujeciones suaves
- Termómetro
- Glucosa
Resumen
- Agitación = síntoma, no diagnóstico
- Evite posiciones que restrinjan el tórax
- Si seda, capnografía y reevaluación son obligatorias para seguridad
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