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(Circulation. 2008;117:2299-2308.)
© 2008 American Heart Association, Inc.
AHA Scientific Statement |
| Abstract |
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Key Words: AHA Scientific Statements cardiac arrest emergency medical services
| Introduction |
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Unfortunately, contemporary health surveillance systems cannot accurately determine the burden of acute cardiovascular illness in the prehospital setting or progress toward reducing it.4 The AHA recently described the essential features of a surveillance system designed to support the prevention and management of heart disease and stroke, as shown in Table 2.5 The present statement describes the burden of cardiac arrest and expands the focus on surveillance to address unique aspects of designating out-of-hospital cardiac arrest as a reportable event. Strategies for managing acute cardiovascular events are summarized, and the role of surveillance in monitoring the impact of efforts to treat these events is examined. 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 the systems. Potential barriers to action on out-of-hospital cardiac arrest are also addressed. In the present statement, out-of-hospital cardiac arrest is the primary event of interest, but similar approaches are applicable to acute myocardial infarction, acute coronary syndromes, and acute stroke in the out-of-hospital setting.
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Implementation of the recommendations made in the present statement would require the commitment of resources beyond those already devoted to surveillance. The return on such an investment, however, could be substantial in terms of improving emergency medical service (EMS) systems nationwide to prevent acute cardiovascular disease (CVD) and other major disorders that are treated by EMS systems, which would result in better population health as well as fewer inflation-adjusted healthcare dollars being spent on acute in-hospital care. Better data would also be useful for targeting research, prevention, and treatment of acute CVD to reduce the burden of illness.
| Public Health Burden |
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The true incidence of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest is an elusive number. Data from the Framingham Heart Study cohort suggest that the age-adjusted annual incidence of sudden cardiac death has a much wider range, from 0.5 to 4.5 per 1000 individuals within the population.13 Other published estimates of deaths attributable to out-of-hospital cardiac arrest range from 184 400 to 450 000 (0.6 to 1.5 per 1000) Americans annually.14–17 Recent data suggest that there are 273 000 EMS-treated out-of-hospital cardiac arrests in the United States annually (ie, 89.9 per 100 000 people) (unpublished data, Resuscitation Outcomes Consortium Investigators, January 28, 2008), which has a population of approximately 303 295 561 individuals (www.census.gov, accessed on January 24, 2008). The incidence of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest appears to be increasing in some populations,16,18 particularly in certain geographic areas.19 Furthermore, the incidence is likely to continue to increase because the prevalence of congestive heart failure is increasing.20,21
There is extensive variation in reported outcome after the onset of cardiac arrest12,22; understandably, this variation has drawn media attention.23,24 The median reported survival-to-discharge rate after any first recorded rhythm is 6.4%.12 This disparity in survival rates reemphasizes that an effective EMS system can decrease disability and death from acute cardiovascular events in the out-of-hospital setting.
| Impact of Emergency Cardiovascular Care on Outcomes |
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There is substantial regional variation in EMS structures and processes, for example, service level provided, number of EMS providers typically responding to a call, time from receipt of a call to arrival at the patients side, use of procedures or drugs in the field, level and type of training, and quality assurance and feedback. Some of these factors have been associated with differences in survival rates or quality-of-life indicators after out-of-hospital resuscitation,32–35 although no analysis has been adequately powered to detect the independent effects of each of these factors.
Some recent studies have been interpreted as suggesting that prehospital emergency cardiovascular care interventions do not improve outcomes for cardiac arrest,36–38 but these studies did not account for the EMS providers previous experience, which is an important outcome predictor.26 Broad implementation and ongoing maintenance of adequately funded EMS systems staffed by highly trained and experienced providers may be necessary to achieve a meaningful impact on death attributable to out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. Illuminating the national burden of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest is an important step toward improving prehospital care in the United States.
In the absence of high-quality evidence to describe the incidence of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest and its outcome, it is impossible to develop a fundamental understanding of acute CVD or to outline a scientifically based approach to reducing its burden.
| Methodological Challenges to Designating Cardiac Arrest as a Reportable Event |
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Such definitions have several limitations. First, because the likelihood of underlying disease is uncertain, many studies presume that an arrest is of cardiac origin unless there is another obvious cause, specifically, unless the episode is known or likely to have been caused by trauma, submersion, drug overdose, asphyxia, exsanguination, or any other noncardiac cause as determined by the rescuers.40 Such classifications are important, especially for studies of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest, but they remain inexact because they are subject to ascertainment bias due to incomplete assessment based on information at the scene or on toxicology tests ordered selectively on patients successfully transferred to the hospital. The frequent lack of autopsy data compounds the problem.
For inclusion in a surveillance system, a pragmatic definition of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest would be an event in which a person is evaluated by organized EMS personnel and (1) receives external defibrillation attempts (by lay responders or emergency personnel) or receives chest compressions by organized EMS personnel, or (2) is pulseless but does not receive defibrillation attempts or CPR from EMS personnel.
A second methodological challenge is presented by the lack of accurate data to describe the structure, process, and outcome of care related to out-of-hospital cardiac arrest because of the lack of uniformity in reporting results. Fortunately, there is now international consensus on how to uniformly report such results.40 To date, however, these uniform standards have been used infrequently to report data from different geographic regions.42
A third methodological challenge is posed by the wide variety of EMS organizational structures, which range from tightly integrated groups of dispatch centers and responders that operate under a single military-like structure to loose networks of public, professional, and entrepreneurial components, each of which has its own oversight and funding sources. Record-handling systems also vary, from hard copy records stored in minimally organized filing systems to computer-based systems that track events from dispatch through hospital admission and outcome. The wide range of data-management methods presents challenges to the efficient conduct of public health surveillance. To avoid overwhelming the resources of EMS agencies, any effort to require reporting of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest episodes must be simple, secure, and user friendly.
A separate but related issue is that EMS agencies provide patient care for many disorders, of which cardiac arrest represents only a small proportion. On the other hand, the standards of practice for other disorders are heterogeneous, whereas for cardiac arrest they are well defined. Thus, the monitoring of treatment of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest by EMS agencies could be the sentinel measure of the quality of EMS care in the community.
| AHA and Healthy People 2010 Goals for Preventing and Managing Heart Disease and Stroke |
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The 10-year impact goal of the AHA to reduce death rates from coronary heart disease and stroke and risk factors for these diseases by 25% by 2010 is aligned with these national health objectives. The specific indicator for emergency cardiovascular care is a 25% reduction in the rate of death from coronary heart disease and stroke. Efforts are ongoing to develop goals for 2020 and beyond; hence, the recommendations provided in the present statement are intended to be flexible.
Surveillance of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest should be integrated into a comprehensive system that supports the prevention of risk factors (Healthy People 2010 Goal 1); detection, treatment, and control of cardiovascular disease (Healthy People 2010 Goal 2); and prevention of recurrent events (Healthy People 2010 Goal 4) as recommended previously.
Opportunities and Approaches to Prevention and Management
Despite considerable study, the real causes of out-of-hospital cardiac death remain obscure. Atherosclerosis is likely a factor in the majority of cases in middle- or high-income countries; structural and congenital cardiac abnormalities, fibrosis, and conditions such as myocarditis contribute to most of the remaining cases.43 Many risk factors for cardiac arrest, such as hypertension and hypercholesterolemia, are present for long periods of time and are likely to be identified whenever an individual is evaluated. Others can be evanescent (eg, hypokalemia). Risk factors may be cellular, phenotypic, environmental, social, educational, behavioral, clinical, or related to health systems; a combination of these factors is usually present. The interplay of these factors is complex; for example, socioeconomic gradients exist in some circulating factors that are not fully explained by health-related behaviors or risk factors for coronary heart disease.44 Comprehensive monitoring of the incidence and outcome of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest could identify high-incidence areas in which the interplay of these factors could be studied in greater detail to identify interventions to prevent or successfully manage out-of-hospital cardiac arrest.
Role of Surveillance in Management Efforts
Public health surveillance is defined by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) as "the ongoing, systematic collection, analysis, interpretation, and dissemination of data regarding health-related events for use in public health action to reduce morbidity and mortality and to improve health."45 Comprehensive and accurate disease surveillance systems are critical to the success of efforts to reduce the burden of CVD. Approximately two thirds of cardiac arrests occur in individuals who had no earlier clinical recognition of cardiac disease,46 and in one third of cardiac arrests, the symptoms began in the hour before the onset of arrest.47 Approximately 60% of out-of-hospital cardiac arrests are treated by EMS personnel.43 Regardless, surveillance systems that do not include episodes that occur in the out-of-hospital setting are likely to substantially underestimate the burden of illness due to CVD as well as the impact of prehospital emergency care on reducing it.
| Available Data |
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The AHA has provided supplementary funding to the Resuscitation Outcomes Consortium to develop an out-of-hospital cardiac arrest registry. The Resuscitation Outcomes Consortium was established in 2004 by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute in partnership with other governmental and nongovernmental funding partners to conduct a series of large, simple randomized trials to evaluate resuscitation interventions in the out-of-hospital setting. The Resuscitation Outcomes Consortium protocols involve 268 EMS and fire-protection agencies that cover 35 000 square miles and serve nearly 24 million people. But these sites consist largely of well-functioning urban and suburban EMS agencies, and thus, their data are likely not representative of the national experience.
Several federal agencies have supported work that could facilitate the development of an out-of-hospital cardiac arrest surveillance system. In 1993, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration supported the development of the Uniform Prehospital Dataset.49 Later, the Emergency Medical Services Agenda for the Future emphasized the need to develop a uniform set of data elements for emergency services as well as mechanisms with which to apply them.50 In 2001, the US General Accounting Office stated that consistent EMS data would facilitate development of national healthcare policy, improve local performance, and improve the ability of clinicians and researchers to assess EMS outcomes.51 Since 2001, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration has supported the development and implementation of a National EMS Information System (NEMSIS) that is intended to capture the EMS episode from activation of the system through release of the patient from EMS care. In 2005, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration and other agencies, including the CDC, funded a technical assistance center to support implementation of NEMSIS and to use it to populate a national EMS database. As of March 5, 2007, 49 states, the District of Columbia, and 3 territories had agreed to support full implementation of the NEMSIS dataset in their jurisdictions. Although the focus of NEMSIS is EMS as a whole rather than just cardiac arrest, the ongoing development of this database will greatly enhance the ability to monitor out-of-hospital cardiac arrest.
At the State Level
Several states have implemented or are in the process of implementing statewide registries that either describe all EMS care, and therefore could be adapted to surveillance of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest, or that focus specifically on cardiac arrest. For example, all EMS agencies in North Carolina are required to submit data to the state daily using the NEMSIS data definitions and extensible markup language–standard-based software. This software is available to interested EMS agencies (at http://www.emspic.org/ems_ toolkits/index.htm) as a toolkit to help the agencies monitor and improve their outcomes. The state of Washington is in the process of implementing a statewide cardiac arrest registry.
At the Local Level
Few EMS agencies routinely assure the quality of care provided to patients being treated for out-of-hospital cardiac arrest, and fewer still report their results. And yet, the Seattle Fire Department Medic One program has monitored the incidence and outcome of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest in Seattle for more than 35 years.52 The paramedic program in King County, Washington, has conducted public health surveillance over a similar period.53 In Olmsted County, Minnesota, the incidence and outcome of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest has been monitored for more than 15 years.54 Each of these agencies reports survival rates that are much greater than elsewhere, thereby reemphasizing the value of ongoing surveillance of cardiac arrest.
Recently, investigators at Emory University and the CDC developed the Cardiac Arrest Registry to Enhance Survival, which they implemented in 8 counties in the Atlanta area. This simple surveillance system links performance measures from 911, fire department first responders, and paramedics to patient survival status at hospital discharge. Participation in the Cardiac Arrest Registry to Enhance Survival has been extended to other geographic areas, but its catchment population to date is less than that of the Resuscitation Outcomes Consortium out-of-hospital cardiac arrest registry.
| Gaps in Data Systems |
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At State and Local Levels
Representative data are also lacking at state and local levels on the incidence of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest, process of care, and outcome at hospital discharge, as are community indicators of early identification and response to symptoms. Finally, representative data on patient health status at discharge are generally unavailable at the state or local levels.
| Barriers to Implementation |
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There is legitimate concern that EMS agencies and those hospitals that receive EMS-treated patients will be reluctant to provide data because they perceive the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act as a barrier to release of any patient data. But the act also states that without individual authorization, a covered entity may disclose protected health information to a public health authority (or to an entity working under a grant of authority from a public health authority) that is legally authorized to collect or receive the information for the purposes of preventing or controlling disease, injury, or disability including but not limited to reporting of disease, injury, and vital events (eg, birth or death) and conducting public health surveillance, investigations, and interventions.55
Thus, state or federal governments and entities working under their authorization for the purpose of public health surveillance should be able to convince care providers that reporting patient data for surveillance purposes does not, under the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, require patient authorization. Adding the designation of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest as a reportable disease should stimulate the collection of such data. Furthermore, under the criteria of minimal risk, collection of de-identified data for these purposes qualifies for a waiver of documented written consent to review the clinical record. State health departments should request assistance from their states legal services department to develop a written document that highlights interpretation of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act as well as the separate but related issue of informed consent to share with potential sources of EMS and hospital data.
| Potential Benefits of Surveillance |
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| Recommendations |
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| Conclusions |
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| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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The American Heart Association makes every effort to avoid any actual or potential conflicts of interest that may arise as a result of an outside relationship or a personal, professional, or business interest of a member of the writing panel. Specifically, all members of the writing group are required to complete and submit a Disclosure Questionnaire showing all such relationships that might be perceived as real or potential conflicts of interest.
This statement was approved by the American Heart Association Science Advisory and Coordinating Committee on February 5, 2008. A single reprint is available by calling 800-242-8721 (US only) or by writing the American Heart Association, Public Information, 7272 Greenville Ave, Dallas, TX 75231-4596. Ask for reprint No. 71-0445. A copy of the statement is also available at http://www.americanheart.org/presenter.jhtml?identifier=3003999 by selecting either the "topic list" or "chronological list" link. To purchase additional reprints, call 843-216-2533 or e-mail kelle.ramsay@wolterskluwer.com.
Expert peer review of AHA Scientific Statements is conducted at the AHA National Center. For more on AHA statements and guidelines development, visit http://www.americanheart.org/presenter.jhtml?identifier=3023366.
Permissions: Multiple copies, modification, alteration, enhancement, and/or distribution of this document are not permitted without the express permission of the American Heart Association. Instructions for obtaining permission are located at http://www.americanheart.org/presenter.jhtml? identifier=4431. A link to the "Permission Request Form" appears on the right side of the page.
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P. J. Kudenchuk, C. E. Fahrenbruch, and T. D. Rea Cardiac Arrest: Survivors or Still Victims? Circulation, July 22, 2008; 118(4): 328 - 330. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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