Schlitt A, Hantke F, Kuss O
Paracelsus-Harz-Klinik Bad Suderode, Quedlinburg und Medizinische Fakultät, Martin-Luther-Universität Halle-Wittenberg, Paracelsusstr. 1, 06485, Quedlinburg, Deutschland.
Praxis Bündnerhof Basel, Basel, Schweiz.
Med Klin Intensivmed Notfmed. 2019 Feb;114(1):30-37. doi: 10.1007/s00063-017-0368-8. Epub 2017 Oct 30.
Thousands of physicians and other employees of the health system participate in major national congresses of German cardiologists, cardiac surgeons, and intensive care physicians and are, thus, key players in the treatment of acute cardiovascular events. While differences in mortality during such congress days were described in the USA, Germany-wide data are missing.
In order to study the effect of congresses on cardiovascular mortality, the numbers of daily cardiovascular deaths (ICD-10 codes: I01-I15, I20-I25, I30-I52) in Germany from 1997-2011 from the data of the Federal Statistical Office were used for the most important cardiac, intensive medical, and cardiac surgery congresses (DGAI, DGIIN, DGK, DGTHG, DIVI). For comparison, numbers of cardiovascular deaths at a defined time interval before and after the respective Congress were defined.
Over the 15-year study period, a total of 701,272 cardiovascular deaths (conference days: 233,456, nonconference days: 467,816) were observed during 89 conferences with 318 congress days and 638 control days. The relative risks of increased mortality on congresses were inconspicuous for the entire population (relative risk [RR] 0.998, confidence interval [CI] 0.994; 1.004), even after adjustment for gender, age group, professional, and ICD codes (RR 1.005, CI 0.951; 1.063).
National congresses of cardiologists, intensive care physicians and cardiac surgeons have no influence on the cardiovascular mortality in Germany.