MClinRes Research Paramedic, South Western Ambulance Service NHS Foundation Trust, Abbey Court, Eagle Way, Exeter, UK.
Head of Research, Audit and Quality Improvement, South Western Ambulance Service NHS Foundation Trust, Exeter, UK.
Scand J Trauma Resusc Emerg Med. 2021 Sep 16;29(1):138. doi: 10.1186/s13049-021-00946-7.
Evidenced-based guidelines on when to cease resuscitation for pulseless electrical activity are limited and support for paramedics typically defaults to the senior clinician. Senior clinicians include paramedics employed to work beyond the scope of clinical guidelines as there may be a point at which it is reasonable to cease resuscitation. To support these decisions, one ambulance service has applied a locally derived cessation of resuscitation checklist. This study aimed to describe the patient, clinical and system factors and examine senior clinician experiences when ceasing resuscitation for pulseless electrical activity.
An explanatory sequential mixed method study was conducted in one ambulance service in the South West of England. A consecutive sample of checklist data for adult pulseless electrical activity were retrieved from 1st December 2015 to 31st December 2018. Unexpected results which required exploration were identified and developed into semi-structured interview questions. A purposive sample of senior clinicians who ceased resuscitation and applied the checklist were interviewed. Content framework analysis was applied to the qualitative findings.
Senior clinicians ceased resuscitation for 50 patients in the presence of factors known to optimise survival: Witnessed cardiac arrest (n = 37, 74%), bystander resuscitation (n = 30, 60%), defibrillation (n = 22, 44%), return of spontaneous circulation (n = 8, 16%). Significant association was found between witnessed cardiac arrest and bystander resuscitation (p = .00). Six senior clinicians were interviewed, and analysis resulted in four themes: defining resuscitation futility, the impact of ceasing resuscitation, conflicting views and clinical decision tools. In the local context, senior clinicians applied their clinical judgement to balance survivability. Multiple factors were considered as the decision to cease resuscitation was not always clear. Senior clinicians deviated from the checklist when the patient was perceived as non-survivable.
Senior clinicians applied clinical judgement to assess patients as non-survivable or when continued resuscitation was considered harmful with no patient benefit. Senior clinicians perceived pre-existing factors with duration of resuscitation and clinical factors known to optimise patient survival. Future practice could look beyond a set criteria in which to cease resuscitation, however, it would be helpful to investigate the value or threshold of factors associated with patient outcome.
目前有关无脉性电活动时停止心肺复苏的循证指南十分有限,而急救医务人员通常默认遵循资深临床医生的建议。资深临床医生包括超出临床指南范围工作的急救医务人员,因为可能存在合理停止复苏的情况。为了支持这些决策,一家救护车服务机构应用了一份本地制定的停止复苏检查表。本研究旨在描述患者、临床和系统因素,并研究资深临床医生在无脉性电活动时停止心肺复苏的经验。
本研究在英格兰西南部的一家救护车服务机构中进行了一项解释性顺序混合方法研究。从 2015 年 12 月 1 日至 2018 年 12 月 31 日,连续采集成人无脉性电活动检查表数据。识别出需要探索的意外结果,并开发出半结构化访谈问题。对应用检查表并停止复苏的资深临床医生进行了有针对性的抽样访谈。对定性发现应用内容框架分析。
在已知可提高生存率的因素存在的情况下,资深临床医生对 50 名患者停止了复苏:目击的心脏骤停(n=37,74%)、旁观者复苏(n=30,60%)、除颤(n=22,44%)、自主循环恢复(n=8,16%)。目击的心脏骤停与旁观者复苏之间存在显著相关性(p=0.00)。对 6 名资深临床医生进行了访谈,分析结果得出了 4 个主题:定义复苏无效性、停止复苏的影响、观点冲突和临床决策工具。在当地背景下,资深临床医生运用其临床判断来平衡生存可能性。在决定停止复苏时,多种因素被考虑在内,因为复苏的结果并不总是明确的。当患者被认为无法生存时,资深临床医生会偏离检查表。
资深临床医生运用临床判断来评估患者是否无法生存,或者当继续复苏被认为有害而没有患者受益时停止复苏。资深临床医生考虑了与复苏持续时间相关的预先存在的因素和已知可提高患者生存率的临床因素。未来的实践可以超越设定的停止复苏标准,但研究与患者结局相关的因素的价值或阈值可能会有所帮助。