• Ugeskrift for laeger · Nov 2008

    [Have the 2005 guidelines for resuscitation been implemented?].

    • Anne Møller Nielsen, Dan Lou Isbye, and Freddy K Lippert.
    • Rigshospitalet, HovedOrtoCentret, Anaestesi- og Operationsklinikken. anne.mn@dadlnet.dk
    • Ugeskr. Laeg. 2008 Nov 17;170(47):3843-7.

    IntroductionIn 2005, new international evidence-based guidelines for cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) were published by the International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation (ILCOR). The aim of these new guidelines is to improve the quality of care and, thereby, the outcome from cardiac arrest. This necessitates that the guidelines are known and implemented in clinical practice. The purpose of this investigation is to elucidate the extent of implementation of Guidelines 2005 (G2005) among doctors on Cardiac Arrest Teams (CAT) one year after the publication. In addition, the date of implementation is examined among medical emergency services and major providers of basic life support (BLS) courses.Material And MethodsA telephone enquiry about CPR among CAT doctors on-duty. Ambulance services and BLS-course providers are contacted by e-mail.ResultsApproximately 70% of the doctors were able to answer simple and essential topics on CPR, e.g. compression/ventilation ratio and the number of shocks in a sequence in accordance with G2005. The ambulance service, Falck A/S, implemented G2005 during 2007, while the other ambulance services implemented G2005 within six months after publication. The majority of BLS-course providers implemented the guidelines one year after their publication.ConclusionOne year after the publication of G2005, there is limited knowledge of the guidelines among doctors on duty. The study does not give any explanation for the lack of implementation. The barriers to implementation should be clarified, and future guidelines should be accompanied by an active strategy for implementation.

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