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Chances of
surviving Cardiac Arrest depend on where
patients are treated
Newswise — Efforts to fight the toll of
cardiac arrest have typically focused on
pre-hospital factors -- bystander CPR
education and improvement, public
defibrillation programs, and quicker EMS
response.
But new research from the University of
Pennsylvania School of Medicine reveals that
the hospital where patients are cared for
after being resuscitated plays a key role in
their chances of survival following these
incidents, which takes the lives of more
than 300,000 Americans each year.
Patients in large, urban, and teaching
hospitals are more likely to survive
compared to those in small, often rural,
non-academic hospitals, according to a study
published recently in the journal Intensive
Care Medicine.
A second study, published in Resuscitation,
suggests that patients who are cared for in
the highest volume intensive care units
after cardiac arrest are also most apt to
survive.
The findings points to a need to explore the
development of specialized, regional
post-cardiac arrest care centers modeled
after those that treat serious trauma
patients, says lead author Brendan Carr, MD,
an assistant professor of Emergency Medicine
and Epidemiology, and associate director of
the Division of Emergency Care Policy &
Research.
Carr’s findings also underscore the
importance of the recent move by New York
City to require ambulances to take cardiac
arrest patients to hospitals that provide
therapeutic hypothermia -- the so-called
"cooling" therapy that protects against
damage to the brain and other organs in the
crucial hours after the heart is restored to
its normal rhythm -- even if those
facilities are further away.
“We are describing the variability that
exists in cardiac arrest outcomes – not at
the level of the patient but at the level of
the hospital. Hospitals with more resources
and hospitals with higher volumes have
better outcomes,” Carr says.
“There
are two possible implications: Either we
need to get everyone up to speed on how to
optimize survival, or we need to selectively
transfer patients to hospitals that have
expertise in the post-arrest period.”
The two studies, which examined a combined
115,000 cases in two different national
datasets, also point to an overall
improvement in cardiac arrest care.
Over the course of the five years studied,
the authors found a small reduction in
mortality that translates to about 11,000
additional lives saved per year -- a
significant decrease for a condition that is
typically fatal.
Better survival odds are multifactorial, but
likely related to advances in critical care,
the recognition of the role of hypothermia,
and the creation of national guidelines for
post-cardiac arrest care.
“There has been a fundamental shift such
that we now recognize the condition patients
experience after cardiac arrest as a
treatable disease,” says senior author
Robert Neumar, MD, PhD, associate professor
of Emergency Medicine and associate director
of Penn’s Center for Resuscitation Science,
and Chair of the Advanced Cardiac Life
Support Subcommittee for the American Heart
Association.
“Among the patients that regain a pulse
after cardiac arrest, only one out of three
survive to hospital discharge, and there
appears to be significant variability among
hospitals.
"Further
research is needed to determine if this
variability in outcome is caused by the
quality of post-cardiac arrest care.
"If
it is, we need to identify best practices
and develop mechanisms to deliver optimal
care for all patients.”
Carr and his colleagues say further study of
post-cardiac arrest care among these large,
urban, and teaching hospitals will be
crucial in mapping strategies that maximize
a patient's chances to be discharged without
the neurological deficits that often plague
cardiac arrest survivors.
And he emphasizes that practitioners can
learn lessons from the connections between
the way hospitals care for patients with
cardiac arrest and other emergent
conditions.
“For me, cardiac arrest is the tip of the
iceberg with respect to disparities in care
for time-sensitive conditions,” Carr says.
“Whether
you’ve had a cardiac arrest, a stroke, or a
heart attack, it is our job to build a
system that promises you the best possible
care no matter where you are, who you are,
or what time of day it is.”
PENN Medicine is a $3.6 billion enterprise
dedicated to the related missions of medical
education, biomedical research, and
excellence in patient care. PENN Medicine
consists of the University of Pennsylvania
School of Medicine (founded in 1765 as the
nation's first medical school) and the
University of Pennsylvania Health System.
Penn's School of Medicine is currently
ranked #4 in the nation in U.S.News & World
Report's survey of top research-oriented
medical schools; and, according to most
recent data from the National Institutes of
Health, received over $379 million in NIH
research funds in the 2006 fiscal year.
Supporting 1,700 fulltime faculty and 700
students, the School of Medicine is
recognized worldwide for its superior
education and training of the next
generation of physician-scientists and
leaders of academic medicine.
The University of Pennsylvania Health System
(UPHS) includes its flagship hospital, the
Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania,
rated one of the nation’s top ten “Honor
Roll” hospitals by U.S.News & World Report;
Pennsylvania Hospital, the nation's first
hospital; and Penn Presbyterian Medical
Center.
In addition UPHS includes a primary-care
provider network; a faculty practice plan;
home care, hospice, and nursing home; three
multispecialty satellite facilities; as well
as the Penn Medicine at Rittenhouse campus,
which offers comprehensive inpatient
rehabilitation facilities and outpatient
services in multiple specialties.
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