Prehospital and Emergency Research Centre, Health Services and Systems Research Duke-NUS Medical School Singapore Singapore.
Duke-NUS Medical School Singapore Singapore.
J Am Heart Assoc. 2024 Sep 17;13(18):e035794. doi: 10.1161/JAHA.124.035794. Epub 2024 Sep 9.
This scoping review collates evidence for sex biases in the receipt of bystander cardiopulmonary resuscitation (BCPR) among patients with out-of-hospital cardiac arrest patients globally. The MEDLINE, PsycINFO, CENTRAL, and Embase databases were screened for relevant literature, dated from inception to March 9, 2022. Studies evaluating the association between BCPR and sex/gender in patients with out-of-hospital cardiac arrest, except for pediatric populations and cardiac arrest cases with traumatic cause, were included. The review included 80 articles on BCPR in men and women globally; 58 of these studies evaluated sex differences in BCPR outcomes. Fifty-nine percent of the relevant studies (34/58) indicated that women are less likely recipients of BCPR, 36% (21/58) observed no significant sex differences, and 5% (3/58) reported that women are more likely to receive BCPR. In other studies, women were found to be less likely to receive BCPR in public but equally or more likely to receive BCPR in residential settings. The general reluctance to perform BCPR on women in the Western countries was attributed to perceived frailty of women, chest exposure, pregnancy, gender stereotypes, oversexualization of women's bodies, and belief that women are unlikely to experience a cardiac arrest. Most studies worldwide indicated that women were less likely to receive BCPR than men. Further research from non-Western countries is needed to understand the impact of cultural and socioeconomic settings on such biases and design customized interventions accordingly.
这篇范围综述汇总了全球范围内院外心脏骤停患者接受旁观者心肺复苏术(BCPR)时存在性别偏见的证据。从 2022 年 3 月 9 日起,对 MEDLINE、PsycINFO、CENTRAL 和 Embase 数据库进行了相关文献筛选。纳入评估 BCPR 与院外心脏骤停患者性别/性别的关联的研究,除儿科人群和创伤性原因引起的心脏骤停病例外。本综述包括全球范围内 80 篇关于男性和女性 BCPR 的文章;其中 58 项研究评估了 BCPR 结果中的性别差异。59%的相关研究(34/58)表明女性接受 BCPR 的可能性较小,36%(21/58)观察到性别差异不显著,5%(3/58)报告称女性接受 BCPR 的可能性更大。在其他研究中,发现女性在公共场所接受 BCPR 的可能性较小,但在居住环境中接受 BCPR 的可能性相等或更大。西方国家普遍不愿意对女性进行 BCPR,这归因于对女性脆弱性、胸部暴露、怀孕、性别刻板印象、对女性身体的过度性化以及认为女性不太可能发生心脏骤停的看法。全球大多数研究表明,女性接受 BCPR 的可能性低于男性。需要来自非西方国家的进一步研究来了解文化和社会经济环境对这些偏见的影响,并相应地设计定制干预措施。