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Query: UMLS:C1522282 (
EMT
)
2,868
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Published reports of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest give widely varying results. The variation in survival rates within each type of system is due, in part, to variation in definitions. To determine other reasons for differences in survival rates, we reviewed published studies conducted from 1967 to 1988 on 39 emergency medical services programs from 29 different locations. These programs could be grouped into five types of prehospital systems based on the personnel who deliver CPR, defibrillation, medications, and endotracheal intubation; the five systems were three types of single-response systems (basic emergency medical technician [
EMT
],
EMT
-defibrillation [
EMT
-D], and paramedic) and two double-response systems (
EMT
/paramedic and
EMT
-D/paramedic). Reported discharge rates ranged from 2% to 25% for all cardiac rhythms and from 3% to 33% for
ventricular fibrillation
. The lowest survival rates occurred in single-response systems and the highest rates in double-response systems, although there was considerable variation within each type of system. Hypothetical survival curves suggest that the ability to resuscitate is a function of time, type, and sequence of therapy. Survival appears to be highest in double-response systems because CPR is started early. We speculate that early CPR permits definitive procedures, including defibrillation, medications, and intubation, to be more effective.
...
PMID:Cardiac arrest and resuscitation: a tale of 29 cities. 230 97
The survival rate for patients with prehospital cardiac arrest has improved in some communities with early defibrillation by emergency medical technician-defibrillators (EMT-Ds). In rural areas, previous studies on survival with defibrillation by
EMT
-Ds have been variable. We conducted an
EMT
-D study to determine effectiveness in various prehospital settings. Sixty-four ambulance services from communities ranging in size from rural areas to city suburbs participated in our prospective study. EMTs were trained in rhythm recognition and the use of a manual defibrillator during a standardized 20-hour course. Over 18 months, data were collected locally for central analysis. Five hundred sixty-six patients with primary cardiac arrest were included in our study: 36 (6.4%) survived. Retrospective review revealed survival before
EMT
-D implementation to be 3.6% (P less than .02). Three hundred four patients (54%) had an initial rhythm of
ventricular fibrillation
, with 33 (11%) surviving. The survival rate for
EMT
-D-witnessed arrest with an initial rhythm of
ventricular fibrillation
was 42%. Patients with asystole were countershocked in our study; however, there were no survivors from this group. The neurologic status of survivors at time of hospital discharge was normal in 72%. The average response time, defined as time of emergency medical services activation to the time of
EMT
-D arrival, was 7.3 +/- 5.8 and 3.7 +/- 2.0 minutes for nonsurvivors and survivors, respectively (P less than .002). There were no survivors when the response time was more than eight minutes.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:EMT-defibrillation: the Wisconsin experience. 233 Nov 15
Some patients converted from
ventricular fibrillation
to organized rhythms by defibrillation-trained ambulance technicians (
EMT
-Ds) will refibrillate before hospital arrival. The authors analyzed 271 cases of
ventricular fibrillation
managed by
EMT
-Ds working without paramedic back-up. Of 111 patients initially converted to organized rhythms, 19 (17%) refibrillated, 11 (58%) of whom were reconverted to perfusing rhythms, including nine of 11 (82%) who had spontaneous pulses prior to refibrillation. Among patients initially converted to organized rhythms, hospital admission rates were lower for patients who refibrillated than for patients who did not (53% versus 76%, P = NS), although discharge rates were virtually identical (37% and 35%, respectively). Scene-to-hospital transport times were not predictively associated with either the frequency of refibrillation or patient outcome. Defibrillation-trained EMTs can effectively manage refibrillation with additional shocks and are not at a significant disadvantage when paramedic back-up is not available.
...
PMID:Refibrillation managed by EMT-Ds: incidence and outcome without paramedic back-up. 377 91
Prehospital bystander cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) was studied to determine if it affected the outcome of defibrillation. Four hundred twenty-one consecutive witnessed cardiopulmonary arrests presenting with the initial rhythm of coarse
ventricular fibrillation
treated by the Milwaukee County Paramedic System from January 1980 to June 1982 were analyzed. Pediatric, trauma, and poisoning patients and those receiving intravenous or endotracheal medications before defibrillation (58) were excluded. Immediate professional bystander CPR (physician, nurse,
EMT
) and citizen bystander CPR were compared to a control group receiving no bystander CPR until arrival of EMS personnel. A successful defibrillation occurred if defibrillation prior to administration of medication produced an effective cardiac rhythm with pulses. Eighty-eight of the 363 remaining patients (24%) converted with initial defibrillations. While the group receiving professional bystander CPR had a higher successful defibrillation rate than did the no-CPR group (35% vs 22%, P less than .04), citizen bystander CPR and no-CPR groups had similar successful defibrillation rates (24% vs 22%, no significant difference). One hundred eighty-six of the 363 patients (51%) were transported to a hospital with a rhythm and a pulse (a successful resuscitation). Ninety-seven of the 363 patients (27%) were discharged alive from the hospital (a save). Patients who were converted successfully using initial "quick-look" defibrillations were far more likely to be successfully resuscitated (79/88 [90%] vs 107/275 [39%], P greater than .0001) and to be discharged alive from the hospital (54/88 [61%] vs 43/275 [16%], P greater than .0001) than were those who required further advanced cardiac life support techniques.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Bystander CPR in prehospital coarse ventricular fibrillation. 648 36
Early defibrillation by emergency medical technicians or even less qualified personnel has been shown to improve survival rates for out-of-hospital cardiac arrest caused by
ventricular fibrillation
. It has been questioned whether these favourable results can be applied within the context of physician-attended emergency medical systems. Taking into consideration the results of a pilot study and after a careful analysis of the logistic and epidemiological background, the first German
EMT
-D program was introduced in the former West Berlin in December 1988. The first 2 years of experience with 499 technician-initiated resuscitation attempts in which the mobile intensive care unit of Klinikum Steglitz was involved, confirmed the results of the pilot study with an improved long-term survival rate (18%) for patients with
ventricular fibrillation
. We conclude that
EMT
defibrillation should be introduced in emergency physician-attended two-tiered emergency medical systems, whenever a thorough analysis of the existing rescue systems exhibits a 'relevant frequency' of resuscitation and response interval of 15 min or less.
...
PMID:Establishment and results of an EMT-D program in a two-tiered physician-escorted rescue system. The experience in Berlin, Germany. 821 Jul 30
Many studies have shown improved survival of cardiac arrest patients by the use of early defibrillation (
EMT
-D) in the field. This prospective study was the first in Pennsylvania and was undertaken to determine if an
EMT
-D program would be successful in our suburban/rural setting. One hundred two EMTs were trained to use a semi-automatic defibrillator and data were collected over 16 months. There were 96 cardiac arrests, with only 33 patients (34%) presenting with initially treatable dysrhythmias--
ventricular fibrillation
(VF) or tachycardia (VT). Twenty-three patients (24%) were admitted to the hospital; survival to hospital discharge occurred in only 5 patients (5.2%). Survival to hospital admission was higher among VF/VT presenting rhythms (36%) than for those with other rhythms (17%, P = 0.07), but survival to discharge among VF/VT rhythms (9%) was not statistically different from other rhythms (3%, P = 0.45). Among VF/VT patients, survival to discharge was correlated with shorter call to first defibrillation intervals. Mean call to response interval was longer than in other reported studies (7.2 +/- 4.3 minutes). In addition, there was a high drop-out rate of
EMT
participants, no central/uniform early access system (that is, 911), and a lower rate of CPR than reported in other studies. It is concluded that introduction of an
EMT
-D program without careful analysis of systems response factors will not lead to the improved cardiac arrest survival percentages that have previously been reported.
...
PMID:Early defibrillation program: problems encountered in a rural/suburban EMS system. 850 13