BMJ 2002;325:503-504 ( 7 September )

Editorials

Outcome after cardiac arrest outside hospital

Is poor, with little progress being made

Papers p 515

The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below.

Despite enormous efforts to improve survival during the past three decades, cardiac arrest outside hospital still makes a disproportionately large contribution to mortality in the Western world. 1 2 So far, the only really valuable interventions have been cardiopulmonary resuscitation, often provided by a bystander, and rapid defibrillation, which is useful if the patient presents with ventricular fibrillation or ventricular tachycardia when emergency medical services arrive. The deployment of automated external defibrillators in selected sites, to be used by (trained) laypersons, has been described as a way to achieve faster defibrillation and improved survival after cardiac arrest outside hospital.3 Such plans may, however, result in limited success, given the current epidemiological developments.

In this issue (p 515) Pell and colleagues present a detailed breakdown of locations in Scotland where patients had cardiac arrests outside hospital over seven years and try to predict the impact of publicly accessible defibrillators on overall survival . . . [Full text of this article]


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Relevant Articles

Public access defibrillators
Malcolm F Woollard, Michael C Colquhoun, Jill P Pell, Jane M Sirel, Nicola L Walker, Stuart M Cobbe, Andrew K Marsden, Ian Ford, Judith Chaloner, Nick Gent, Alfredo D Espinosa-Brito, Alfredo A Espinosa-Roca, Yenisey Quintero-Méndez, and Yainel Cutiño-Maás
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BMJ 2002 325: 515. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]

This article has been cited by other articles:

  • Woollard, M. F, Colquhoun, M. C, Pell, J. P, Sirel, J. M, Walker, N. L, Cobbe, S. M, Marsden, A. K, Ford, I., Chaloner, J., Gent, N., Espinosa-Brito, A. D, Espinosa-Roca, A. A, Quintero-Mendez, Y., Cutino-Maas, Y. (2003). Public access defibrillators. BMJ 326: 162-162 [Full text]  

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