From the Emergency Medical Services Division, Public Health -Seattle and King County (LB, SH, PK, AD, TR, ME) , Seattle , Washington ; and the Department of Medicine, University of Washington (PK, TR, ME) , Seattle , Washington .
Prehosp Emerg Care. 2014 Jan-Mar;18(1):22-7. doi: 10.3109/10903127.2013.825353. Epub 2013 Sep 12.
Improving survival from out-of-hospital cardiac arrest is an ongoing challenge for emergency medical services (EMS). Various strategies for shortening the time from collapse to defibrillation have been used, and one is to equip police officers with defibrillators. Objective. We evaluated the programmatic implementation of police defibrillation to determine if such a program could improve the process of care in a high-functioning and mature EMS system.
We conducted a prospective observational study of implementation of a police defibrillation in two police departments in King County, Washington, from March 1, 2010 to March 31, 2012. The program was designed to dispatch police specifically to cases with a high suspicion of cardiac arrest, defined as a patient who was unconscious and not breathing normally. We included all nontraumatic out-of-hospital cardiac arrest events that occurred prior to EMS arrival and within the city limits of the two cities. We collected both EMS and police dispatch reports to document times of call receipt, dispatch, and arrival of both agencies. We obtained rhythm recordings when the automated external defibrillators (AEDs) were used by the police. Descriptive statistics were used to measure frequency of police dispatch and to compare times to treatment between patients with a police response and those without.
During the study period there were 231 cases of cardiac arrest that occurred prior to EMS arrival eligible for police response in the study communities. Police were dispatched to 124 (54%) of these cases. Of the 124, the police arrived before EMS 37 times, or 16% of the 231 cases. Police performed CPR in 29 of these cases and applied the AED in 21 of them. Of the 21 cases in which the AED was applied for cardiac arrest, a shock was delivered on first analysis for 6 patients. Although the response interval between dispatch to scene arrival was similar for EMS and police (4.5 minutes versus 4.6 minutes respectively, p = 0.08), police were dispatched considerably slower than EMS (1.8 minutes versus 0.6 minutes, p < 0.001).
In the current programmatic implementation, police had a measurable but limited involvement in resuscitation. Efforts to address dispatch challenges may improve police involvement.
提高院外心脏骤停患者的生存率是急救医疗服务(EMS)面临的一项持续挑战。已经使用了各种缩短从心脏骤停到除颤的时间的策略,其中一种策略是为警察配备除颤器。目的:我们评估了警察除颤的计划实施情况,以确定此类计划是否可以改善功能完善和成熟的 EMS 系统中的护理过程。
我们对华盛顿州金县的两个警察局实施警察除颤的情况进行了前瞻性观察研究,从 2010 年 3 月 1 日至 2012 年 3 月 31 日。该计划旨在专门派遣警察到高度怀疑为心脏骤停的病例,定义为无意识且呼吸不正常的患者。我们纳入了在 EMS 到达之前和在两个城市范围内发生的所有非创伤性院外心脏骤停事件。我们收集了 EMS 和警察调度报告,以记录接收到的电话,调度和两个机构到达的时间。当警察使用自动体外除颤器(AED)时,我们获取了节律记录。使用描述性统计数据来测量警察派遣的频率,并比较有警察响应和无警察响应的患者之间的治疗时间。
在研究期间,在研究社区中,有 231 例在 EMS 到达之前发生的心脏骤停事件有资格接受警察响应。警察被派往其中 124 例(54%)。在这 124 例中,警察在 37 次情况下先于 EMS 到达,占 231 例的 16%。警察在 29 例中进行了 CPR,并在 21 例中使用了 AED。在应用 AED 治疗 21 例心脏骤停的情况下,有 6 例在第一次分析时即接受了电击。尽管 EMS 和警察之间的调度至现场到达的响应间隔相似(分别为 4.5 分钟和 4.6 分钟,p = 0.08),但警察的调度速度明显慢于 EMS(分别为 1.8 分钟和 0.6 分钟,p <0.001)。
在当前的计划实施中,警察在复苏中发挥了可衡量但有限的作用。解决调度挑战的努力可能会提高警察的参与度。