Title | Emergency vehicle intervals versus collapse-to-CPR and collapse-to-defibrillation intervals: monitoring emergency medical services system performance in sudden cardiac arrest. |
Publication Type | Journal Article |
Year of Publication | 1993 |
Authors | Valenzuela TD, Spaite DW, Meislin HW, Clark LL, Wright AL, Ewy GA |
Journal | Ann Emerg Med |
Volume | 22 |
Issue | 11 |
Pagination | 1678-83 |
Date Published | 1993 Nov |
ISSN Number | 0196-0644 |
Keywords | Aged, 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 Journal | Ann Emerg Med |
PubMed ID | 8214856 |
Emergency vehicle intervals versus collapse-to-CPR and collapse-to-defibrillation intervals: monitoring emergency medical services system performance in sudden cardiac arrest.
Faculty Reference:
Harvey W. Meislin, MD, FACEP, FAAEM
Daniel W. Spaite, MD
Terence Valenzuela, MD, MPH