Prehospital cardiac arrest resuscitation practices differ around the globe

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Background: Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) is a major public health problem. This study aims to describe the international variations in the practices related to the initiation, termination, and refraining from resuscitation of adult patients (≥18 years) with a non-traumatic OHCA. Methods: An...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores: Kjær, Jeannett, Milling, Louise, Brøchner, Anne Craveiro, Lippert, Freddy, Blomberg, Stig Nikolaj, Christensen, Helle Collatz, Holgate, Robyn, Morrison, Laurie J., Bakhsh, Abdullah, Mikkelsen, Søren, Alsulimani, Loui K., Popela, Stanislav, Vidunová, Jana Kruba, Peran, David, Gregor, Roman, Papousek, René, Simić, Anđela, Cairol, Andrés, Ingelmo, Vicente Sánchez Brunete, Björnsson, Hjalti Már, Stammet, Pascal, Escalante-Kanashiro, Raffo, Nikolaidou, Olympia, Karageorgos, Vlasios, Aslanidis, Theodoros, Wallner, Bernd, Rief, Martin, Eichinger, Michael, Chakra Rao, Siddha S.C., SinghMD, Baljit, Birkun, Alexei A., Aguilera, Pablo, Bakker, Jan, Zaher, Muhammad Sultan, Alwajeeh, Sultan Ali, Tanabe, Seizan, Iwami, Taku, Saito, Shunsuke, Fraga-Sastrias, Juan Manuel, Kittivo, June Eva, Achiro, Kephas Ochieng, Ndinda, Caroline, Monsieurs, Koen, Snijders, Erwin, Abdullah, Naseef, Stanton, David, Meyer, John Thomas, Crawford, Steven John, Loghmari, Dorra, Turkia, Hela ben, Barbaria, Wiem, Wijesuriya, Nilmini, Dilruk Indika Rathnayake, Rathnayake Mudiyanselage, Woltman, Nathan, Mesa-Gaerlan, Faith Joan, Convocar, Pauline, Velasco, Bernadett Pua, Alihodžić, Hajriz, Alrawashdeh, Ahmad, Alwidyan, Mahmoud T., Soares-Oliveira, Miguel, Mota, Mauro, Cao, Yu, Yao, Peng, Kin Lam, Rex Pui, Cheung, Arthur Chi Kin, Bogár, Bence, Temesvari, Peter, Gebei, Róbert, Karaaslan, Pelin, Sofuoglu, Turhan, Ciocan, Liviu, Jaeger, Déborah, Sung, Chih Wei, Chen, Chi Hsin, Gellerfors, Mikael, Wahlin, Rebecka Rubenson, Schell, Carl Otto, Gardiner, Fergus, Nichols, Martin, Perillo, Sam, Reid, David, Mohrsen, Stian, Corfield, Alasdair R., Allen, Marc, Falcetta, Stefano, Menarini, Maurizio, Rehn, Marius, Kramer-Johansen, Jo, Bredmose, Per P., Olasveengen, Theresa Mariero, Uleberg, Oddvar, Wilson, Thomas, Lindner, Thomas W., Jacobsen, Lars, Formo, Amund, Elden, Trond, Olsen, Mari Stokstad, Kowalski, Marcin, Derkowski, Tomasz
Formato: artículo
Fecha de Publicación:2025
Institución:Universidad Peruana de Ciencias Aplicadas
Repositorio:UPC-Institucional
Lenguaje:inglés
OAI Identifier:oai:repositorioacademico.upc.edu.pe:10757/686704
Enlace del recurso:http://hdl.handle.net/10757/686704
Nivel de acceso:acceso abierto
Materia:Emergency care disparities
Health policies
Health system capacity
Termination of resuscitation (TOR)
Descripción
Sumario:Background: Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) is a major public health problem. This study aims to describe the international variations in the practices related to the initiation, termination, and refraining from resuscitation of adult patients (≥18 years) with a non-traumatic OHCA. Methods: An exploratory descriptive study was conducted using a cross-sectional online survey. The respondents were recruited using snowball sampling technique. Framework analysis was used to identify key themes in responses, with descriptive statistics summarising data trends. Results: The study collected responses from 59 countries. Our findings reveal that respondents from 59.3% of countries reported that they initiate resuscitation in all cases where the patients do not show obvious signs of irreversible death or do not have confirmed advance directives. Respondents from 15.3% of countries reported that once started, prehospital resuscitation attempts are not terminated. Prehospitally respondents from 20.3% of the countries reported that they rely exclusively on specific criteria to decide when to terminate resuscitation efforts while in 45.8%, these decisions are made at the discretion of the provider. Respondents from most countries (91.5%) reported that they refrain from resuscitation in the presence of obvious signs of irreversible death. Respondents from 57.6% of countries, reported that they refrained from resuscitation if the patient had a confirmed do-not-attempt-cardiopulmonaryresuscitation (DNACPR), while 15.3% mentioned staff safety as a reason to abstain from attempting resuscitation. Conclusion: This study reveals global variation in EMS resuscitation practices, reflecting disparities in resources, healthcare infrastructure, EMS system design, community acceptability given cultural and societal norms, and legislation.
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