Improved Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest Survival Through the Inexpensive Optimization of an Existing Defibrillation Program
Open Access
- 7 April 1999
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in JAMA
- Vol. 281 (13), 1175-1181
- https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.281.13.1175
Abstract
Research from JAMA — Improved Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest Survival Through the Inexpensive Optimization of an Existing Defibrillation Program — OPALS Study Phase II — ContextSurvival rates for out-of-hospital cardiac arrest are low; published survival rates in Ontario are only 2.5%. This study represents phase II of the Ontario Prehospital Advanced Life Support (OPALS) study, which is designed to systematically evaluate the effectiveness and efficiency of various prehospital interventions for patients with cardiac arrest, trauma, and critical illnesses.ObjectiveTo assess the impact on out-of-hospital cardiac arrest survival of the implementation of a rapid defibrillation program in a large multicenter emergency medical services (EMS) system with existing basic life support and defibrillation (BLS-D) level of care.DesignControlled clinical trial comparing survival for 36 months before (phase I) and 12 months after (phase II) system optimization.SettingNineteen urban and suburban Ontario communities (populations ranging from 16,000 to 750,000 [total, 2.7 million]).PatientsAll patients who had out-of-hospital cardiac arrest in the study communities for whom resuscitation was attempted by emergency responders.InterventionsStudy communities optimized their EMS systems to achieve the target response interval from when a call was received until a vehicle stopped with a defibrillator of 8 minutes or less for 90% of cardiac arrest cases. Working both locally and provincially, communities implemented multiple measures, including defibrillation by firefighters, base paging, tiered response agreements with fire departments, continuous quality improvement for response intervals, and province-wide revision and implementation of standard dispatch policies. All response times were obtained from a central dispatch system.Main Outcome MeasureSurvival to hospital discharge.ResultsThe 4690 cardiac arrest patients studied in phase I and the 1641 in phase II were similar for all clinical and demographic characteristics, including age, sex, witnessed status, rhythm, and receipt of bystander cardiopulmonary resuscitation. The proportion of cases meeting the 8-minute response criterion improved (76.7% vs 92.5%; P<.001) as did most median response intervals. Overall survival to hospital discharge for all rhythm groups combined improved from 3.9% to 5.2% (P=.03). The 33% relative increase in survival represents an additional 21 lives saved each year in the study communities (approximately 1 life per 120,000 residents). The charges were estimated to be US $46,900 per life saved for establishing the rapid defibrillation program and US $2400 per life saved annually for maintaining the program.ConclusionAn inexpensive, multifaceted system optimization approach to rapid defibrillation can lead to significant improvements in survival after cardiac arrest in a large BLS-D EMS system.Keywords
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