“…Despite all the available techniques, OTI remains the gold standard for airway management because its utility and safety mainly depend on nonpatient-related factors, such as consistent [29] 8.0 (1.0-26.0) SpO2 < 90% after intubation, hypotension, aspiration Hansen et al [25] 1.2 (0.8-1.5) Bleeding, bradycardia, hypotension, hypoxia, trauma, sickness Bankole et al [22] 2.6 (0.1-13.5) ND Eich et al [39] 1.7 (0.0-9.2) Misplaced tube Ehrlich et al [11] 3.4 (0.4-11.7) Body intubation, aspiration, barotrauma, extubation Vilke et al [41] 0.9 (0.2-2.7) ND Pointer [43] 2.8 (0.1-14.5) ND Aijian et al [44] 3.6 (0. Emergency Medicine International training of prehospital staff and sufficient pediatric intubation opportunities, which may reach only up to 4 or 5 per year, as stated previously [11,15,21,23,24]. Nowadays, there are 2 prehospital care models: the Anglo-American model, whose aim is for patients to arrive at the hospital and receive treatment there, and the French-German model, which focuses on the hospital arriving where the patient is.…”