Bett J H
Department of Cardiology, Royal Brisbane Hospital, Australia.
Ann Emerg Med. 1989 Sep;18(9):969-74. doi: 10.1016/s0196-0644(89)80462-7.
We examined the performance of a hospital-based mobile coronary care unit staffed by emergency physicians, coronary care nurses, and ambulance personnel in a metropolitan setting (Brisbane, Australia). Our unit attended 2,260 calls during 18 months of operation. Standard dispatched ambulances arrived first to 78% of the 2,260 calls. Ten percent of these calls were to patients who had died or had arrested; 45% of these patients were found in ventricular fibrillation and 10% were discharged alive from the hospital. Survival was related to the performance of CPR before the arrival of the unit and to the finding of ventricular fibrillation. As the success of our unit was clearly inferior to that reported from centers where the first-responders are licensed to defibrillate, its operations have ceased and regular ambulance crews are being taught to recognize and treat patients with ventricular fibrillation.
我们对一家位于大都市(澳大利亚布里斯班)、由急诊科医生、冠心病护理护士和救护人员组成的医院移动冠心病监护单元的工作情况进行了考察。在其运行的18个月里,该单元共接到2260次呼叫。在这2260次呼叫中,标准调度的救护车首先抵达了其中的78%。这些呼叫中有10%是针对已经死亡或心跳骤停的患者;其中45%的患者被发现处于心室颤动状态,10%的患者出院时仍存活。存活与该单元到达之前的心肺复苏操作以及心室颤动的发现情况有关。由于我们这个单元的成功率明显低于那些急救人员被许可进行除颤的中心所报告的成功率,其业务已经停止,并且正在培训正规的救护车工作人员识别和治疗心室颤动患者。