• Resuscitation · Jun 1992

    An audit of cardiac arrest management by extended trained ambulance crew.

    • C F Weston and M R Stephens.
    • Department of Cardiology, University Hospital of Wales, Cardiff, UK.
    • Resuscitation. 1992 Jun 1;23(3):207-16.

    ObjectiveTo audit the use of extended skills by South Glamorgan Ambulance crew in attempted resuscitations from out-of-hospital cardio-respiratory arrest, in terms of successful discharge of patients from hospital and the accuracy with which agreed protocols were applied. Design-Retrospective analysis of ambulance report forms, electrocardiograph rhythm strips, casualty cards and discharge summaries during 26 months (1st May 1987-30th June 1989).SettingA mixed urban and semi-rural area of 187 square miles with a population of 396,000.ResultsThere were 274 attempted resuscitations. Seven patients (2.5%) were managed for primary respiratory arrest and 3 were discharged. In 98 patients (35.8%) the initial resuscitation protocol was for ventricular fibrillation: 26 were admitted and 17 were discharged. In 169 patients (61.7%) the initial resuscitation protocol was for asystole or electromechanical dissociation: 11 were admitted and 1 discharged. The majority of patients who were successfully discharged from hospital were those in ventricular fibrillation who responded to defibrillation alone (13 survivors). Drug administration may have played a role in the successful resuscitation of the remainder. Endotracheal intubation was successful in 94.7% and vein cannulation in 87.7% of attempts. There were deviations from the ventricular fibrillation protocol in 27 cases (27.5%) and from the asystole protocol in 27 cases (16.0%).ConclusionSurvival rates for ventricular fibrillation managed by these personnel were satisfactory with early defibrillation. Defibrillation alone was responsible for the majority of successful resuscitations. The additional benefit of drug administration appears small, though potentially important. The majority of patients were in asystole by the time the ambulance arrived.ImplicationsExtended trained crews use their skills effectively. The most important skill is defibrillation. Further studies are required to explain the high proportion of patients found in asystole. The performance of individual ambulance personnel should be assessed prospectively, because agreed resuscitation protocols are not always followed.

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