Lauterbach S A, Spadafora M, Levy R
Division of Emergency Medicine, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Ohio 45267.
JACEP. 1978 Oct;7(10):355-7. doi: 10.1016/s0361-1124(78)80223-8.
The effectiveness of cardiac resuscitations by Cincinnati paramedics was monitored for one year. The outcome of every arrest was assigned to one of four categories: dead on arrival, died in the emergency department, died in the hospital or discharged alive, and each patient was followed until death or discharge from a hospital. Of the 147 people in the study group, 22 left the hospital alive, a long-term success rate of 15%, and another 26 died during hospitalization, 18% of the study population. This data is comparable to success rates reported by other prehospital care systems. Furthermore, this data indicates approximately 15% of people who have cardiac arrests outside of a hospital can survive through prompt intervention by trained personnel.