Determining consistency of care after resuscitation from in-hospital cardiac arrest, a retrospective analysis at a tertiary care academic medical center.

Heart Lung

Assistant Professor, Division of Pulmonary, Critical Care, and Sleep Medicine, Medical Director, Medical Intensive Care Unit, Harborview Medical Center, University of Washington, 325 9th Ave, Box 359762, Seattle WA 98104, USA.

Published: June 2022

Background: Few guidelines have focused on the care delivered after return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC). Post ROSC best practice guidelines lack clarity about important tasks to accomplish in the first hours after ROSC.

Objectives And Methods: We conducted a retrospective cohort analysis of adults who had suffered an in hospital cardiac arrest (IHCA) with ROSC over a two-year period to determine the completion rate of critical tasks in the immediate post-ROSC period: ECG within one hour, ABG within one hour, physician documentation within six hours, and surrogate communication within six hours.

Results: In the 113 reviewed cases, there was significant variance between completion of all four (19.4%), three (35.3%), two (32.7%), one (20.6%) and none (1.7%) of these critical post ROSC tasks. We observed that 62.8% of IHCA with ROSC had an ECG obtained within one hour of ROSC. The rate of obtaining an ABG within one hour of ROSC was 76.9%. 49.5% of cases had physician documentation of the resuscitation within six hours of ROSC. The rate of documenting surrogate communication within six hours of ROSC was 69.9%.

Conclusions: Our study demonstrated that the completion rates of critical tasks in the post ROSC setting were suboptimal within our patient cohort. This provides a baseline for the development of future best practice guidelines and clinical decision-making aids for post ROSC care after IHCA. This can lead to future research in coupling specific care tasks to post ROSC patient outcomes.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.hrtlng.2022.04.007DOI Listing

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