Breckwoldt Jan, Schloesser Sebastian, Arntz Hans-Richard
Department of Anesthesiology and Perioperative Intensive Care, Charité - University Medicine Berlin, Campus Benjamin Franklin, Hindenburgdamm 30, 12200 Berlin, Germany.
Resuscitation. 2009 Oct;80(10):1108-13. doi: 10.1016/j.resuscitation.2009.06.028. Epub 2009 Jul 25.
An important predictor of outcomes from out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OOHCA) is bystander resuscitation, but in industrialised nations this is undertaken only in 15-50%. To explore reasons for this low response rate we analysed bystander perceptions during the victim's collapse, and methods used to assess cardiac arrest.
Over a 12-month period we prospectively investigated all dispatches for witnessed cardiac arrest of two physician-staffed emergency medical service (EMS) units within a western European metropolitan area (Berlin, Germany). On scene the bystander was identified by the EMS physician and approached to have a semi-structured interview in the following days.
Out of 201 eligible responses, 138 bystanders could be interviewed (68.7%). 63 (45.3%) of these bystanders did not detect cardiac arrest. 36 bystanders (25.9%) spontaneously reported a "bluish colour" of the patient's head or body which occurred "unexpectedly". 39 persons (28.1%) reported abnormal breathing. Assessment of breathing was not undertaken in 27.0%, nor of circulation in 29.0%. If circulation was assessed pulse check was performed in 93.4%.
In this sample of interviewed bystanders of OOHCA, almost half of the arrests were not detected. This might be a reason for the low rate of bystander resuscitation. Common bystander perceptions of arrest presence included "bluish skin colour" and abnormal breathing of the victim. These findings indicate that improvement of perception capabilities should be incorporated as a major learning objective into lay basic life support training. In addition, information regarding skin colour may be of value in dispatch protocols.
院外心脏骤停(OOHCA)预后的一个重要预测因素是旁观者实施复苏,但在工业化国家,只有15% - 50%的情况会进行旁观者复苏。为探究这种低响应率的原因,我们分析了旁观者在患者心脏骤停时的认知以及用于评估心脏骤停的方法。
在12个月的时间里,我们前瞻性地调查了西欧一个大都市地区(德国柏林)两个配备医生的紧急医疗服务(EMS)单位接到的所有目击心脏骤停的调度情况。在现场,EMS医生识别出旁观者,并在接下来的几天内对其进行半结构化访谈。
在201份符合条件的响应中,138名旁观者接受了访谈(68.7%)。这些旁观者中有63人(45.3%)未察觉到心脏骤停。36名旁观者(25.9%)自发报告患者头部或身体出现“蓝色”,且这种情况“出乎意料”。39人(28.1%)报告呼吸异常。27.0%的情况未对呼吸进行评估,29.0%的情况未对循环进行评估。如果对循环进行了评估,93.4%的情况进行了脉搏检查。
在这个院外心脏骤停旁观者样本中,几乎一半的心脏骤停未被察觉。这可能是旁观者复苏率低的一个原因。旁观者对心脏骤停存在的常见认知包括“皮肤发蓝”和受害者呼吸异常。这些发现表明,应将提高认知能力作为主要学习目标纳入非专业人员基础生命支持培训。此外,关于肤色的信息在调度协议中可能有价值。