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院外心脏骤停监测 - 心脏骤停注册以提高存活率 (CARES),美国,2005 年 10 月 1 日至 2010 年 12 月 31 日。

Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest surveillance --- Cardiac Arrest Registry to Enhance Survival (CARES), United States, October 1, 2005--December 31, 2010.

机构信息

Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia, USA.

出版信息

MMWR Surveill Summ. 2011 Jul 29;60(8):1-19.

Abstract

PROBLEM/CONDITION: Each year, approximately 300,000 persons in the United States experience an out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA); approximately 92% of persons who experience an OHCA event die. An OHCA is defined as cessation of cardiac mechanical activity that occurs outside of the hospital setting and is confirmed by the absence of signs of circulation. Whereas an OHCA can occur from noncardiac causes (i.e., trauma, drowning, overdose, asphyxia, electrocution, primary respiratory arrests, and other noncardiac etiologies), the majority (70%--85%) of such events have a cardiac cause. The majority of persons who experience an OHCA event, irrespective of etiology, do not receive bystander-assisted cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) or other timely interventions that are known to improve the likelihood of survival to hospital discharge (e.g., defibrillation). Because nearly half of cardiac arrest events are witnessed, efforts to increase survival rates should focus on timely and effective delivery of interventions by bystanders and emergency medical services (EMS) personnel. This is the first report to provide summary data from an OHCA surveillance registry in the United States.

REPORTING PERIOD

This report summarizes surveillance data collected during October 1, 2005-- December 31, 2010.

DESCRIPTION OF THE SYSTEM

In 2004, CDC established the Cardiac Arrest Registry to Enhance Survival (CARES) in collaboration with the Department of Emergency Medicine at the Emory University School of Medicine. This registry evaluates only OHCA events of presumed cardiac etiology that involve persons who received resuscitative efforts, including CPR or defibrillation. Participating sites collect data from three sources that define the continuum of emergency cardiac care: 911 dispatch centers, EMS providers, and receiving hospitals. OHCA is defined in CARES as a cardiac arrest that occurred in the prehospital setting, had a presumed cardiac etiology, and involved a person who received resuscitative efforts, including CPR or defibrillation.

RESULTS

During October 1, 2005--December 31, 2010, a total of 40,274 OHCA records were submitted to the CARES registry. After noncardiac etiology arrests and missing hospital outcomes were excluded from the analysis (n = 8,585), 31,689 OHCA events of presumed cardiac etiology (e.g., myocardial infarction or arrhythmia) that received resuscitation efforts in the prehospital setting were analyzed. The mean age at cardiac arrest was 64.0 years (standard deviation [SD]: 18.2); 61.1% of persons who experienced OHCA were male (n = 19,360). According to local EMS agency protocols, 21.6% of patients were pronounced dead after resuscitation efforts were terminated in the prehospital setting. The survival rate to hospital admission was 26.3%, and the overall survival rate to hospital discharge was 9.6%. Approximately 36.7% of OHCA events were witnessed by a bystander. Only 33.3% of all patients received bystander CPR, and only 3.7% were treated by bystanders with an automated external defibrillator (AED) before the arrival of EMS providers. The group most likely to survive an OHCA are persons who are witnessed to collapse by a bystander and found in a shockable rhythm (e.g., ventricular fibrillation or pulseless ventricular tachycardia). Among this group, survival to discharge was 30.1%. A subgroup analysis was performed among persons who experienced OHCA events that were not witnessed by EMS personnel to evaluate rates of bystander CPR for these persons. After exclusion of 3,400 OHCA events that occurred after the arrival of EMS providers, bystander CPR information was analyzed for 28,289 events. In this group, whites were significantly more likely to receive CPR than blacks, Hispanics, or members of other racial/ethnic populations (p<0.001). Overall survival to hospital discharge of patients whose events were not witnessed by EMS personnel was 8.5%. Of these, patients who received bystander CPR had a significantly higher rate of overall survival (11.2%) than those who did not (7.0%) (p<0.001).

INTERPRETATION

CARES data have helped identify opportunities for improvement in OHCA care. The registry is being used continually to monitor prehospital performance and selected aspects of hospital care to improve quality of care and increase rates of survival following OHCA. CARES data confirm that patients who receive CPR from bystanders have a greater chance of surviving OHCA than those who do not.

PUBLIC HEALTH ACTIONS

Medical directors and public health professionals in participating communities use CARES data to measure and improve the quality of prehospital care for persons experiencing OHCA. Tracking performance longitudinally allows communities to better understand which elements of their care are working well and which elements need improvement. Education of public officials and community members about the importance of increasing rates of bystander CPR and promoting the use of early defibrillation by lay and professional rescuers is critical to increasing survival rates. Reporting at the state and local levels can enable state and local public health and EMS agencies to coordinate their efforts to target improving emergency response for OHCA events, regardless of etiology, which can lead to improvement in OHCA survival rates.

摘要

问题/状况:每年,美国约有 30 万人经历院外心脏骤停(OHCA);约 92%经历 OHCA 事件的人死亡。OHCA 定义为心脏机械活动停止,发生在医院环境之外,并通过无循环迹象证实。虽然 OHCA 可能由非心脏原因引起(即创伤、溺水、中毒、窒息、电击、原发性呼吸骤停和其他非心脏病因),但大多数(70%-85%)此类事件有心脏原因。大多数经历 OHCA 事件的人,无论病因如何,都没有接受旁观者协助的心肺复苏术(CPR)或其他及时干预措施,这些措施已知可提高存活至出院的可能性(例如除颤)。由于近一半的心脏骤停事件有目击者,因此应将提高生存率的努力重点放在旁观者和紧急医疗服务(EMS)人员的及时有效的干预措施上。这是第一份报告,提供了美国 OHCA 监测登记处的汇总数据。

报告期

本报告总结了 2005 年 10 月 1 日至 2010 年 12 月 31 日期间的监测数据。

系统描述

2004 年,疾病预防控制中心与埃默里大学医学院急诊医学系合作成立了心脏骤停登记处以提高生存能力(CARES)。该登记处仅评估涉及接受复苏努力的人员的推定心脏病因的 OHCA 事件,包括 CPR 或除颤。参与站点从三个来源收集数据,这些数据定义了紧急心脏护理的连续体:911 调度中心、EMS 提供者和接收医院。CARES 中的 OHCA 定义为发生在院前环境中的心脏骤停,具有推定的心脏病因,并且涉及接受复苏努力的人员,包括 CPR 或除颤。

结果

2005 年 10 月 1 日至 2010 年 12 月 31 日期间,共向 CARES 登记处提交了 40274 份 OHCA 记录。在排除非心脏病因骤停和缺失的医院结局(n=8585)后,分析了 31689 例推定心脏病因(例如心肌梗死或心律失常)的 OHCA 事件,这些事件在院前环境中接受了复苏努力。心脏骤停时的平均年龄为 64.0 岁(标准差[SD]:18.2);经历 OHCA 的人中,61.1%为男性(n=19360)。根据当地 EMS 机构的协议,21.6%的患者在院前环境中复苏努力终止后被宣布死亡。入院生存率为 26.3%,整体出院生存率为 9.6%。大约 36.7%的 OHCA 事件有旁观者目睹。只有 33.3%的所有患者接受旁观者 CPR,只有 3.7%的患者在 EMS 提供者到达之前由旁观者使用自动体外除颤器(AED)治疗。最有可能存活 OHCA 的人群是由旁观者目睹晕倒并发现处于可除颤节律(例如心室颤动或无脉搏性室性心动过速)的人。在这群人中,出院时的存活率为 30.1%。对未被 EMS 人员目击的 OHCA 事件进行了亚组分析,以评估这些人接受旁观者 CPR 的比率。排除 EMS 人员到达后发生的 3400 例 OHCA 事件后,分析了 28289 例事件的旁观者 CPR 信息。在该组中,白人接受 CPR 的可能性明显高于黑人、西班牙裔或其他种族/民族人群(p<0.001)。未被 EMS 人员目击的患者的总体出院生存率为 8.5%。在这些患者中,接受旁观者 CPR 的患者的总生存率明显高于未接受者(7.0%)(p<0.001)。

解释

CARES 数据有助于确定改善 OHCA 护理的机会。该登记处正在持续使用,以监测院前表现和选定的医院护理方面,以提高护理质量并增加 OHCA 后的生存率。CARES 数据证实,接受旁观者 CPR 的患者比未接受者更有可能存活 OHCA。

公共卫生行动

参与社区的医疗主任和公共卫生专业人员使用 CARES 数据来衡量和改善经历 OHCA 的人员的院前护理质量。纵向跟踪绩效使社区能够更好地了解其护理工作的哪些方面效果良好,哪些方面需要改进。向政府官员和社区成员宣传提高旁观者 CPR 率和促进非专业救援人员早期使用除颤的重要性,对于提高生存率至关重要。在州和地方各级报告可以使州和地方公共卫生和 EMS 机构能够协调努力,针对 OHCA 事件的改善紧急反应,无论病因如何,这都可以提高 OHCA 的生存率。

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