Impact of COVID-19 on out-of-hospital cardiac arrest: A registry-based cohort-study from the German Resuscitation Registry

Author:

Ristau PatrickORCID,Wnent Jan,Gräsner Jan-Thorsten,Fischer Matthias,Bohn Andreas,Bein Berthold,Brenner Sigrid,Seewald StephanORCID

Abstract

Introduction The global COVID-19 pandemic effects people and the health system. Some international studies reported an increasing number of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA). Comparable studies regarding the impact of COVID-19 on incidence and outcome of OHCA are not yet available for Germany. Materials and methods This epidemiological study from the German Resuscitation Registry (GRR) compared a non-pandemic period (01.03.2018–28.02.2019) and a pandemic period (01.03.2020–28.02.2021) regarding the pandemic-related impact on OHCA care. Results A total of 18,799 cases were included. The incidence of OHCA (non-pandemic 117.9 vs. pandemic period 128.0/100,000 inhabitants) and of OHCA with resuscitation attempted increased (66.0 vs. 69.1/100,000). OHCA occurred predominantly and more often at home (62.8% vs. 66.5%, p<0.001). The first ECG rhythm was less often shockable (22.2% vs. 20.3%, p = 0.03). Fewer cases of OHCA were observed (58.6% vs. 55.6% p = 0.02). Both the bystander resuscitation rate and the proportion of telephone guided CPR remained stable (38.6% vs. 39.8%, p = 0.23; and 22.3% vs. 22.5%, p = 0.77). EMS arrival times increased (08:39 min vs. 09:08 min, p<0.001). Fewer patients reached a return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) (45.4% vs. 40.9%, p<0.001), were admitted to hospital (50.2% vs. 45.0%, p<0.001), and discharged alive (13.9% vs. 10.2%, p<0.001). Discussion Survival after OHCA significantly decreased while the bystander resuscitation rate remained stable. However, longer EMS arrival times and fewer cases of witnessed OHCA may have contributed to poorer survival. Any change to EMS systems in the care of OHCA should be critically evaluated as it may mean a real loss of life—regardless of the pandemic situation.

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference27 articles.

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3. World Health Organization (WHO), editor. COVID-19 significantly impacts health services for noncommunicable diseases. 01.06.2020 [cited 24 May 2021]. Available from: https://www.who.int/news/item/01-06-2020-covid-19-significantly-impacts-health-services-for-noncommunicable-diseases.

4. Hospital admissions during Covid-19 lock-down in Germany: Differences in discretionary and unavoidable cardiovascular events;E Stöhr;PLoS One,2020

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