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Jill P Pell a Department of Medical Cardiology, University of
Glasgow, Glasgow Royal Infirmary, Glasgow G31 2ER, b Scottish Ambulance Service
Headquarters, Edinburgh, c Robertson Centre for Biostatistics, University of
Glasgow
Correspondence to: S M Cobbe stuart.cobbe{at}clinmed.gla.ac.uk
Objectives:
To determine the association between
ambulance response time and survival from out of hospital
cardiopulmonary arrest and to estimate the effect of reducing response times.
What is already known on this topic
What this study adds
Design:
Cohort study.
Setting:
Scottish Ambulance Service.
Subjects:
All out of hospital cardiopulmonary arrests due to cardiac disease attended by the Scottish Ambulance Service during May 1991 to March 1998.
Main outcome measures:
Survival rate to hospital
discharge and potential improvement from reducing response times.
Results:
Of 13 822 arrests not witnessed by ambulance crews but attended by them within 15 minutes, complete data were available for 10 554 (76%). Of these patients, 653 (6%) survived to
hospital discharge. After other significant covariates were adjusted
for, shorter response time was significantly associated with increased
probability of receiving defibrillation and survival to discharge among
those defibrillated. Reducing the 90th centile for response time to 8 minutes increased the predicted survival to 8%, and reducing it to 5 minutes increased survival to 10-11% (depending on the model used).
Conclusions:
Reducing ambulance response times to 5 minutes could almost double the survival rate for cardiac arrests not witnessed by ambulance crews.
Three quarters of all deaths from myocardial infarction occur after
cardiac arrest in the community
Ambulance response times are independently associated with
defibrillation and survival
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