• Crit Care Explor · Oct 2020

    Rationale and Strategies for Development of an Optimal Bundle of Management for Cardiac Arrest.

    • Paul E Pepe, Tom P Aufderheide, Lionel Lamhaut, Daniel P Davis, Charles J Lick, Kees H Polderman, Kenneth A Scheppke, Charles D Deakin, Brian J O'Neil, Hans van Schuppen, Michael K Levy, Marvin A Wayne, Scott T Youngquist, Johanna C Moore, Keith G Lurie, Jason A Bartos, Kerry M Bachista, Michael J Jacobs, Carolina Rojas-Salvador, Sean T Grayson, James E Manning, Michael C Kurz, Guillaume Debaty, Nicolas Segal, Peter M Antevy, David A Miramontes, Sheldon Cheskes, Joseph E Holley, Ralph J Frascone, Raymond L Fowler, and Demetris Yannopoulos.
    • Dallas County Fire Rescue, Dallas, TX.
    • Crit Care Explor. 2020 Oct 1; 2 (10): e0214.

    ObjectivesTo construct a highly detailed yet practical, attainable roadmap for enhancing the likelihood of neurologically intact survival following sudden cardiac arrest.Design Setting And PatientsPopulation-based outcomes following out-of-hospital cardiac arrest were collated for 10 U.S. counties in Alaska, California, Florida, Ohio, Minnesota, Utah, and Washington. The 10 identified emergency medical services systems were those that had recently reported significant improvements in neurologically intact survival after introducing a more comprehensive approach involving citizens, hospitals, and evolving strategies for incorporating technology-based, highly choreographed care and training. Detailed inventories of in-common elements were collated from the ten 9-1-1 agencies and assimilated. For reference, combined averaged outcomes for out-of-hospital cardiac arrest occurring January 1, 2017, to February 28, 2018, were compared with concurrent U.S. outcomes reported by the well-established Cardiac Arrest Registry to Enhance Survival.InterventionsMost commonly, interventions and components from the ten 9-1-1 systems consistently included extensive public cardiopulmonary resuscitation training, 9-1-1 system-connected smart phone applications, expedited dispatcher procedures, cardiopulmonary resuscitation quality monitoring, mechanical cardiopulmonary resuscitation, devices for enhancing negative intrathoracic pressure regulation, extracorporeal membrane oxygenation protocols, body temperature management procedures, rapid cardiac angiography, and intensive involvement of medical directors, operational and quality assurance officers, and training staff.Measurements And Main ResultsCompared with Cardiac Arrest Registry to Enhance Survival (n = 78,704), the cohorts from the 10 emergency medical services agencies examined (n = 2,911) demonstrated significantly increased likelihoods of return of spontaneous circulation (mean 37.4% vs 31.5%; p < 0.001) and neurologically favorable hospital discharge, particularly after witnessed collapses involving bystander cardiopulmonary resuscitation and shockable cardiac rhythms (mean 10.7% vs 8.4%; p < 0.001; and 41.6% vs 29.2%; p < 0.001, respectively).ConclusionsThe likelihood of neurologically favorable survival following out-of-hospital cardiac arrest can improve substantially in communities that conscientiously and meticulously introduce a well-sequenced, highly choreographed, system-wide portfolio of both traditional and nonconventional approaches to training, technologies, and physiologic management. The commonalities found in the analyzed systems create a compelling case that other communities can also improve out-of-hospital cardiac arrest outcomes significantly by conscientiously exploring and adopting similar bundles of system organization and care.Copyright © 2020 The Authors. Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. on behalf of the Society of Critical Care Medicine.

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