Emergency vehicle intervals versus collapse-to-CPR and collapse-to-defibrillation intervals: monitoring emergency medical services system performance in sudden cardiac arrest.

TitleEmergency vehicle intervals versus collapse-to-CPR and collapse-to-defibrillation intervals: monitoring emergency medical services system performance in sudden cardiac arrest.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication1993
AuthorsValenzuela TD, Spaite DW, Meislin HW, Clark LL, Wright AL, Ewy GA
JournalAnn Emerg Med
Volume22
Issue11
Pagination1678-83
Date Published1993 Nov
ISSN Number0196-0644
KeywordsAged, Arizona, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation, Death, Sudden, Cardiac, Electric Countershock, Emergency Medical Services, Heart Arrest, Humans, Male, Prospective Studies, Quality of Health Care, Survival Rate, Time Factors, Ventricular Fibrillation
Abstract

STUDY OBJECTIVE: To compare emergency vehicle response intervals with collapse-to-intervention intervals to determine which of these system data better correlated with survival after prehospital sudden cardiac arrest.

STUDY DESIGN: A 22-month case series, collected prospectively, of out-of-hospital cardiac arrests. Times of collapse, dispatch, scene arrival, CPR, and initial defibrillation were determined from dispatch records, recordings of arrest events, interviews with bystanders, and hospital records.

SETTING: Southwestern city (population, 400,000; area, 390 km2) with a two-tiered basic life support-advanced life support emergency medical services system. Emergency medical technician-firefighters without electrical defibrillation capability comprised the first response tier; firefighter-paramedics were the second tier.

PATIENTS: One hundred eighteen cases of witnessed, out-of-hospital cardiac arrest in adults with initial ventricular fibrillation.

MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Survival was defined as a patient who was discharged alive from the hospital.

RESULTS: Eighteen of 118 patients (15%) survived. Survivors did not differ significantly from nonsurvivors in age, sex, or basic life support or advanced life support response intervals. Survivors had significantly (P < .05) shorter intervals from collapse to CPR (1.7 versus 5.2 minutes) and to defibrillation (7.4 versus 9.5 minutes).

CONCLUSION: Collapse-to-intervention intervals, not emergency vehicle response intervals, should be used to characterize emergency medical services system performance in the treatment of sudden cardiac death.

Alternate JournalAnn Emerg Med
PubMed ID8214856
Faculty Reference: 
Harvey W. Meislin, MD, FACEP, FAAEM
Daniel W. Spaite, MD
Terence Valenzuela, MD, MPH