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LO72: Implementation of an educational program to improve the cardiac arrest diagnostic accuracy of ambulance communication officers: a concurrent control before-after study

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 May 2017

C. Vaillancourt*
Affiliation:
Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, Ottawa, ON
A. Kasaboski
Affiliation:
Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, Ottawa, ON
M. Charette
Affiliation:
Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, Ottawa, ON
L. Calder
Affiliation:
Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, Ottawa, ON
L. Boyle
Affiliation:
Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, Ottawa, ON
S. Nakao
Affiliation:
Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, Ottawa, ON
D. Crete
Affiliation:
Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, Ottawa, ON
M. Kline
Affiliation:
Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, Ottawa, ON
R. Souchuk
Affiliation:
Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, Ottawa, ON
N. Kristensen
Affiliation:
Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, Ottawa, ON
G.A. Wells
Affiliation:
Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, Ottawa, ON
I.G. Stiell
Affiliation:
Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, Ottawa, ON
*
*Corresponding authors

Abstract

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Introduction: Most ambulance communication officers receive minimal education on agonal breathing, often leading to unrecognized out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA). We sought to evaluate the impact of an educational program on cardiac arrest recognition, and on bystander CPR and survival rates. Methods: Ambulance communication officers in Ottawa, Canada received additional training on agonal breathing, while the control site (Windsor, Canada) did not. Sites were compared to their pre-study performance (before-after design), and to each other (concurrent control). Trained investigators used a piloted-standardized data collection tool when reviewing the recordings for all potential OHCA cases submitted. OHCA was confirmed using our local OHCA registry, and we requested 9-1-1 recordings for OHCA cases not initially suspected. Two independent investigators reviewed medical records for non-OHCA cases receiving telephone-assisted CPR in Ottawa. We present descriptive and chi-square statistics. Results: There were 988 confirmed and suspected OHCA in the “before” (540 Ottawa; 448 Windsor), and 1,076 in the “after” group (689 Ottawa; 387 Windsor). Characteristics of “after” group OHCA patients were: mean age (68.1 Ottawa, 68.2 Windsor); Male (68.5% Ottawa, 64.8% Windsor); witnessed (45.0% Ottawa, 41.9% Windsor); and initial rhythm VF/VT (Ottawa 28.9, Windsor 22.5%). Before-after comparisons were: for cardiac arrest recognition (from 65.4% to 71.9% in Ottawa p=0.03; from 70.9% to 74.1% in Windsor p=0.37); for bystander CPR rates (from 23.0% to 35.9% in Ottawa p=0.0001; from 28.2% to 39.4% in Windsor p=0.001); and for survival to hospital discharge (from 4.1% to 12.5% in Ottawa p=0.001; from 3.9% to 6.9% in Windsor p=0.03). “After” group comparisons between Ottawa and Windsor (control) were not statistically different, except survival (p=0.02). Agonal breathing was common (25.6% Ottawa, 22.4% Windsor) and present in 18.5% of missed cases (15.8% Ottawa, 22.2% Windsor p=0.27). In Ottawa, 31 patients not in OHCA received chest compressions resulting from telephone-assisted CPR instructions. None suffered injury or adverse effects. Conclusion: While all OHCA outcomes improved over time, the educational intervention significantly improved OHCA recognition in Ottawa, and appeared to mitigate the impact of agonal breathing.

Information

Type
Oral Presentations
Copyright
Copyright © Canadian Association of Emergency Physicians 2017