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Association between location of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest, on-scene socioeconomic status, and accessibility to public automated defibrillators in two large metropolitan areas in Canada and France

Authors :
Matthieu Heidet
Julie Freyssenge
Clément Claustre
John Deakin
Jennie Helmer
Bruno Thomas-Lamotte
Mathys Wohl
Li Danny Liang
Hervé Hubert
Valentine Baert
Christian Vilhelm
Laurie Fraticelli
Éric Mermet
Axel Benhamed
François Revaux
Éric Lecarpentier
Guillaume Debaty
Karim Tazarourte
Sheldon Cheskes
Jim Christenson
Carlos El Khoury
Brian Grunau
Source :
Resuscitation. 181
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

To compare walking access times to automated external defibrillators (AEDs) between area-level quintiles of socioeconomic status (SES) in out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) cases occurring in 2 major urban regions of Canada and France.This was an international, multicenter, retrospective cohort study of adult, non-traumatic OHCA cases in the metropolitan Vancouver (Canada) and Rhône County (France) regions that occurred between 2014 and 2018. We calculated area-level SES for each case, using quintiles of country-specific scores (Q5 = most deprived). We identified AED locations from local registries. The primary outcome was the simulated walking time from the OHCA location to the closest AED (continuous and dichotomized by a 3-minute 1-way threshold). We fit multivariate models to analyze the association between OHCA-to-AED walking time and outcomes (Q5 vs others).A total of 6,187 and 3,239 cases were included from the Metro Vancouver and Rhône County areas, respectively. In Metro Vancouver Q5 areas (vs Q1-Q4), areas, AEDs were farther from (79 % over 400 m from case vs 67 %, p 0.001) and required longer walking times to (97 % above 3 min vs 91 %, p 0.001) cases. In Rhône Q5 areas, AEDs were closer than in other areas (43 % over 400 m from case vs 50 %, p = 0.01), yet similarly poorly accessible (85 % above 3 min vs 86 %, p = 0.79). In multivariate models, AED access time ≥ 3 min was associated with decreased odds of survival at hospital discharge in Metro Vancouver (odds ratio 0.41, 95 % CI [0.23-0.74], p = 0.003).Accessibility of public AEDs was globally poor in Metro Vancouver and Rhône, and even poorer in Metro Vancouver's socioeconomically deprived areas.

Details

ISSN :
18731570
Volume :
181
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Resuscitation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ef83c5be6814edc5f755f4890556468a