Scapigliati Andrea, Zace Drieda, Matsuyama Tasuku, Pisapia Luca, Saviani Michela, Semeraro Federico, Ristagno Giuseppe, Laurenti Patrizia, Bray Janet E, Greif Robert
Institute of Anaesthesia and Intensive Care, Catholic University of the Sacred Heart, Fondazione Policlinico Universitario A. Gemelli, IRCCS, 00168 Rome, Italy.
Italian Resuscitation Council, 40128 Bologna, Italy.
J Clin Med. 2021 Dec 7;10(24):5719. doi: 10.3390/jcm10245719.
Early intervention of bystanders (the first links of the chain of survival) have been shown to improve survival and good neurological outcomes of patients suffering out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA). Many initiatives have been implemented to increase the engagement of communities in early basic life support (BLS) and cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR), especially of lay people with no duty to respond. A better knowledge of the most effective initiatives might help improve survival and health system organization. Aim of the scoping review: To assess the impact of specific interventions involving lay communities on bystander BLS rates and other consistent clinical outcomes, and to identify relevant knowledge gaps.
This scoping review was part of the continuous evidence evaluation process of the International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation (ILCOR), and was performed following the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic reviews and Meta-Analyses extension for Scoping Reviews. We performed a literature search using the PubMed, EMBASE, and Cochrane databases until 1 February 2021. The screening process was conducted based on predefined inclusion/exclusion criteria, and for each included study, we performed data extraction focusing on the type of intervention implemented, and the impact of these interventions on the specific OHCAs outcomes.
Our search strategy identified 19 eligible studies, originating mainly from the USA (47.4%) and Denmark (21%). The type of intervention included in 57.9% of cases was a community CPR training program, in 36.8% bundled interventions, and in 5.3% mass-media campaigns. The most commonly reported outcome for OHCAs was bystander CPR rate (94.7%), followed by survival to hospital discharge (36.8%), proportion of people trained (31.6%), survival to hospital discharge with good neurological outcome (21%), and Return of Spontaneous Circulation (10.5%). Community training programs and bundled interventions improved bystander CPR in most of the included studies.
Based on the results of our scoping review, we identified the potential benefit of community initiatives, such as community training in BLS, even as part of bundled intervention, in order to improve bystander CPR rates and patient outcomes.
旁观者的早期干预(生存链的第一环节)已被证明可提高院外心脏骤停(OHCA)患者的生存率及良好神经功能转归。许多举措已被实施,以提高社区对早期基本生命支持(BLS)和心肺复苏(CPR)的参与度,尤其是无响应义务的普通民众。更好地了解最有效的举措可能有助于提高生存率及改善卫生系统组织。范围综述的目的:评估涉及普通社区的特定干预措施对旁观者BLS率及其他一致临床结局的影响,并识别相关知识空白。
本范围综述是国际复苏联合委员会(ILCOR)持续证据评估过程的一部分,按照系统评价和Meta分析扩展版的首选报告项目进行范围综述。我们使用PubMed、EMBASE和Cochrane数据库进行文献检索,截至2021年2月1日。筛选过程基于预定义的纳入/排除标准进行,对于每项纳入研究,我们进行数据提取,重点关注实施的干预措施类型以及这些干预措施对特定OHCA结局的影响。
我们的检索策略确定了19项符合条件的研究,主要来自美国(47.4%)和丹麦(21%)。57.9%的病例所纳入的干预措施类型为社区CPR培训项目,36.8%为捆绑式干预措施,5.3%为大众媒体宣传活动。OHCA最常报告的结局是旁观者CPR率(94.7%),其次是出院生存率(36.8%)、接受培训的人员比例(31.6%)、出院时伴有良好神经功能转归的生存率(21%)以及自主循环恢复(10.5%)。在大多数纳入研究中,社区培训项目和捆绑式干预措施提高了旁观者CPR率。
基于我们范围综述的结果,我们确定了社区举措的潜在益处,例如BLS社区培训(即使作为捆绑式干预措施的一部分),以提高旁观者CPR率及患者结局。