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Care and outcomes of urban and non-urban out-of-hospital cardiac arrest patients during the HeartRescue Project in Washington state and North Carolina

Authors :
Christopher B. Granger
Carolina Malta Hansen
Bryan McNally
Kristian Kragholm
Benjamin Strauss
Lisa Monk
Thomas D. Rea
Jenny Shin
James G. Jollis
Matthew E. Dupre
Clark Tyson
David Pearson
R. Darrell Nelson
Emil L. Fosbøl
Monique A Starks
Source :
Kragholm, K, Hansen, C M, Dupre, M E, Strauss, B, Tyson, C, Monk, L, Pearson, D A, Nelson, R D, Fosbøl, E L, Starks, M, Jollis, J G, Shin, J, Rea, T, McNally, B & Granger, C B 2020, ' Care and outcomes of urban and non-urban out-of-hospital cardiac arrest patients during the HeartRescue Project in Washington state and North Carolina ', Resuscitation, vol. 152, pp. 5-15 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.resuscitation.2020.04.030
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

AIM: We examined overall and temporal differences in out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) care and outcomes by urban versus non-urban setting separately for North Carolina (NC) and Washington State (WA) during HeartRescue initiatives and associations of urban/non-urban settings with outcome by state.METHODS: OHCAs of presumed cardiac etiology from counties with complete registry enrollment in NC during 2010-2014 (catchment population = 3,143,809) and WA during 2011-2014 (catchment population = 3,653,506) were identified. Geospatial arrest location data and US Census classification were used to categorize urban areas with ≥50,000 versus non-urban RESULTS: Included were 7731 NC cases (78.9% urban) and 4472 WA cases (85.8% urban). Bystander cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) increased from 36.9% (2010) to 50.3% (2014) in NC non-urban areas versus 58.2% (2011) to 69.2% (2014) in WA; and from 39.3% to 51.1% in NC urban areas versus 52.4% to 61.8% in WA. Crude discharge survival odds ratio (OR) was 2.49 (95%CI 1.96-3.16) for urban versus non-urban NC cases not declared dead in field (N = 4241). Adjusted for age, sex, public location, bystander-witness status, time between emergency call and emergency medical service (EMS) arrival, calendar-year, bystander and first-responder CPR and defibrillation and direct PCI-center transport, OR was 1.30 (95%CI 0.98-1.73). In WA, corresponding crude and adjusted ORs were 1.38 (95%CI 0.99-1.93) and 1.46 (95%CI 1.00-2.13). In both states, bystander and first-responder CPR and defibrillation and direct PCI-hospital transport were associated with increased survival.CONCLUSIONS: During HeartRescue initiatives, bystander CPR increased in urban and non-urban locations. Bystander and first-responder interventions and direct PCI-hospital transport were associated with improved outcomes, including in non-urban areas.

Details

ISSN :
18731570
Volume :
152
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Resuscitation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6354ad6c8a9406199dcea0bf1beda336
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.resuscitation.2020.04.030