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Location of In‐Hospital Cardiac Arrest in the United States—Variability in Event Rate and Outcomes

Authors :
Sarah M. Perman
Emily Stanton
Jasmeet Soar
Robert A. Berg
Michael W. Donnino
Mark E. Mikkelsen
Dana P. Edelson
Matthew M. Churpek
Lin Yang
Raina M. Merchant
Graham Nichol
Vinay M. Nadkarni
Mary Ann Peberdy
Paul S. Chan
Tim Mader
Karl B. Kern
Sam Warren
Emilie Allen
Brian Eigel
Elizabeth A. Hunt
Joseph P. Ornato
Scott Braithwaite
Romergryko G. Geocadin
Mary E. Mancini
Jerry Potts
Tanya Lane Truitt
Source :
Journal of the American Heart Association: Cardiovascular and Cerebrovascular Disease
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2016.

Abstract

Background In‐hospital cardiac arrest ( IHCA ) is a major public health problem with significant mortality. A better understanding of where IHCA occurs in hospitals (intensive care unit [ ICU ] versus monitored ward [telemetry] versus unmonitored ward) could inform strategies for reducing preventable deaths. Methods and Results This is a retrospective study of adult IHCA events in the Get with the Guidelines—Resuscitation database from January 2003 to September 2010. Unadjusted analyses were used to characterize patient, arrest, and hospital‐level characteristics by hospital location of arrest ( ICU versus inpatient ward). IHCA event rates and outcomes were plotted over time by arrest location. Among 85 201 IHCA events at 445 hospitals, 59% (50 514) occurred in the ICU compared to 41% (34 687) on the inpatient wards. Compared to ward patients, ICU patients were younger (64±16 years versus 69±14; P P ICU , mean event rate/1000 bed‐days was 0.337 (±0.215) compared with 0.109 (±0.079) for telemetry wards and 0.134 (±0.098) for unmonitored wards. Of patients with an arrest in the ICU , the adjusted mean survival to discharge was 0.140 (0.037) compared with the unmonitored wards 0.106 (0.037) and telemetry wards 0.193 (0.074). More IHCA events occurred in the ICU compared to the inpatient wards and there was a slight increase in events/1000 patient bed‐days in both locations. Conclusions Survival rates vary based on location of IHCA . Optimizing patient assignment to unmonitored wards versus telemetry wards may contribute to improved survival after IHCA .

Details

ISSN :
20479980
Volume :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of the American Heart Association
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....657d54c751408af6be41b6d8e76feaec
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1161/jaha.116.003638