Impact of Community-Wide Police Car Deployment of Automated External Defibrillators on Survival From Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest

Author:

Myerburg Robert J.1,Fenster Jeffrey1,Velez Mauricio1,Rosenberg Donald1,Lai Shenghan1,Kurlansky Paul1,Newton Starbuck1,Knox Melenda1,Castellanos Agustin1

Affiliation:

1. From the Division of Cardiology, University of Miami School of Medicine (R.J.M., J.F., D.R., A.C.); Metropolitan Dade County Public Health Trust and Jackson Memorial Hospital (M.V.); Metropolitan Miami-Dade County Police Department (M.K.); and Miami Heart Research Institute (P.K., S.N.), Miami, Fla; and the School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University (S.L.), Baltimore, Md.

Abstract

Background— Disappointing survival rates from out-of-hospital cardiac arrests encourage strategies for faster defibrillation, such as use of automated external defibrillators (AEDs) by nonconventional responders. Methods and Results— AEDs were provided to all Miami-Dade County, Florida, police. AED-equipped police (P-AED) and conventional emergency medical rescue (EMS) responders are simultaneously deployed to possible cardiac arrests. Times from 9-1-1 contact to the scene were compared for P-AED and concurrently deployed EMS, and both were compared with historical EMS experience. Survival with P-AED was compared with outcomes when EMS was the sole responder. Among 420 paired dispatches of P-AED and EMS, the mean±SD P-AED time from 9-1-1 call to arrival at the scene was 6.16±4.27 minutes, compared with 7.56±3.60 minutes for EMS ( P <0.001). Police arrived first to 56% of the calls. The time to first responder arrival among P-AED and EMS was 4.88±2.88 minutes ( P <0.001), compared with a historical response time of 7.64±3.66 minutes when EMS was the sole responder. A 17.2% survival rate was observed for victims with ventricular fibrillation or pulseless ventricular tachycardia (VT/VF), compared with 9.0% for standard EMS before P-AED implementation ( P =0.047). However, VT/VF benefit was diluted by the observation that 61% of the initial rhythms were nonshockable, reducing the absolute survival benefit among the total study population to 1.6% (P-AED, 7.6%; EMS, 6.0%). Conclusions— P-AED establishes a layer of responders that generate improved response times and survival from VT/VF. There was no benefit for victims with nonshockable rhythms.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

Reference32 articles.

1. Myerburg RJ Castellanos A. Cardiac arrest and sudden cardiac death. In: Braunwald E Zipes DP Libby P eds. Heart Disease: A Textbook of Cardiovascular Medicine. 6th ed. Philadelphia Pa: WB Saunders; 2001: 890–931.

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