AI Article Synopsis

  • The American Heart Association aims to cut death rates from heart disease and stroke by 25% by improving prehospital emergency care and addressing risk factors.
  • Many heart disease patients suffer cardiac arrest before reaching the hospital, and current systems lack the data needed to effectively monitor and reduce these incidents in the out-of-hospital setting.
  • Recommendations include classifying out-of-hospital cardiac arrests as reportable events, improving data collection on CPR and defibrillation efforts, and creating annual national reports on progress in managing these cases, while also addressing barriers like privacy concerns and costs.

Article Abstract

The 2010 impact goal of the American Heart Association is to reduce death rates from heart disease and stroke by 25% and to lower the prevalence of the leading risk factors by the same proportion. Much of the burden of acute heart disease is initially experienced out of hospital and can be reduced by timely delivery of effective prehospital emergency care. Many patients with an acute myocardial infarction die from cardiac arrest before they reach the hospital. A small proportion of those with cardiac arrest who reach the hospital survive to discharge. Current health surveillance systems cannot determine the burden of acute cardiovascular illness in the prehospital setting nor make progress toward reducing that burden without improved surveillance mechanisms. Accordingly, the goals of this article provide a brief overview of strategies for managing out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. We review existing surveillance systems for monitoring progress in reducing the burden of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest in the United States and make recommendations for filling significant gaps in these systems, including the following: 1. Out-of-hospital cardiac arrests and their outcomes through hospital discharge should be classified as reportable events as part of a heart disease and stroke surveillance system. 2. Data collected on patients' encounters with emergency medical services systems should include descriptions of the performance of cardiopulmonary resuscitation by bystanders and defibrillation by lay responders. 3. National annual reports on key indicators of progress in managing acute cardiovascular events in the out-of-hospital setting should be developed and made publicly available. Potential barriers to action on cardiac arrest include concerns about privacy, methodological challenges, and costs associated with designating cardiac arrest as a reportable event.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.107.189472DOI Listing

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