Clinical Epidemiology Unit, Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, The Ottawa Hospital, Civic Campus, Rm F649, 1053 Carling Ave., Ottawa, Ontario, K1Y 4E9, Canada.
Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Canada.
BMC Emerg Med. 2021 Mar 4;21(1):26. doi: 10.1186/s12873-021-00416-4.
Sudden cardiac death remains a leading cause of mortality in Canada, resulting in more than 35,000 deaths annually. Most cardiac arrest victims collapse in their own home (85% of the time) and 50% are witnessed by a family member or bystander. Survivors have a quality of life similar to the general population, but the overall survival rate for out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) rarely exceeds 8%. Victims are almost four times more likely to survive when receiving bystander CPR, but bystander CPR rates have remained low in Canada over the past decade, not exceeding 15-25% until recently. Telecommunication-assisted CPR instructions have been shown to significantly increase bystander CPR rates, but agonal breathing may be misinterpreted as a sign of life by 9-1-1 callers and telecommunicators, and is responsible for as much as 50% of missed OHCA diagnoses. We sought to improve the ability and speed with which ambulance telecommunicators can recognize OHCA over the phone, initiate timely CPR instructions, and improve survival.
In this multi-center national study, we will implement and evaluate an educational program developed for ambulance telecommunicators using a multiple baseline interrupted time-series design. We will compare outcomes 12 months before and after the implementation of a 20-min theory-based educational video addressing barriers to recognition of OHCA while in the presence of agonal breathing. Participating Canadian sites demonstrated prior ability to collect standardized data on OHCA. Data will be collected from eligible 9-1-1 recordings, paramedic documentation and hospital medical records. Eligible cases will include suspected or confirmed OHCA of presumed cardiac origin in patients of any age with attempted resuscitation.
The ability of telecommunication-assisted CPR instructions to improve bystander CPR and survival rates for OHCA victims is undeniable. The ability of telecommunicators to recognize OHCA over the phone is unequivocally impeded by relative lack of training on agonal breathing, and reluctance to initiate CPR instructions when in doubt. Our pilot data suggests the potential impact of this project will be to increase absolute OHCA recognition and bystander CPR rates by at least 10%, and absolute out-of-hospital cardiac arrest survival by 5% or more.
Prospectively registered on March 28, 2019 at ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT03894059 .
在加拿大,心源性猝死仍然是导致死亡的主要原因,每年导致超过 35000 人死亡。大多数心脏骤停患者在自己家中(85%的时间)倒下,其中 50%被家庭成员或旁观者目睹。幸存者的生活质量与一般人群相似,但院外心脏骤停(OHCA)的总体存活率很少超过 8%。当接受旁观者心肺复苏(CPR)时,患者的存活率几乎高出四倍,但在过去十年中,加拿大的旁观者 CPR 率一直很低,直到最近才超过 15-25%。电信辅助 CPR 指导已被证明可显著提高旁观者 CPR 率,但濒死呼吸可能被 9-1-1 呼叫者和电信人员误解为生命迹象,占 OHCA 漏诊的 50% 之多。我们试图提高救护车电信人员通过电话识别 OHCA 的能力和速度,及时启动 CPR 指导,并提高生存率。
在这项多中心全国性研究中,我们将使用基于时间序列的中断多基线设计实施和评估一项针对救护车电信人员的教育计划。我们将比较实施针对存在濒死呼吸时识别 OHCA 的障碍的 20 分钟理论教育视频前后 12 个月的结果。参与的加拿大站点先前已证明有能力收集 OHCA 的标准化数据。数据将从合格的 9-1-1 录音、护理人员记录和医院病历中收集。合格病例将包括任何年龄疑似或确诊的心脏原因引起的疑似 OHCA 患者,并进行尝试复苏。
电信辅助 CPR 指导提高 OHCA 患者旁观者 CPR 和生存率的能力是不可否认的。电信人员通过电话识别 OHCA 的能力受到相对缺乏濒死呼吸培训以及在有疑问时不愿启动 CPR 指导的阻碍。我们的试点数据表明,该项目的潜在影响将是至少提高 10%的绝对 OHCA 识别率和旁观者 CPR 率,以及提高 5%或更多的院外心脏骤停生存率。
于 2019 年 3 月 28 日在 ClinicalTrials.gov 上进行了前瞻性注册,标识符:NCT03894059。