Combinations of First Responder and Drone Delivery to Achieve 5-Minute AED Deployment in OHCA.
JACC Adv
; 3(7): 101033, 2024 Jul.
Article
em En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-39130039
ABSTRACT
Background:
Defibrillation in the critical first minutes of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) can significantly improve survival. However, timely access to automated external defibrillators (AEDs) remains a barrier.Objectives:
The authors estimated the impact of a statewide program for drone-delivered AEDs in North Carolina integrated into emergency medical service and first responder (FR) response for OHCA.Methods:
Using Cardiac Arrest Registry to Enhance Survival registry data, we included 28,292 OHCA patients ≥18 years of age between 1 January 2013 and 31 December 2019 in 48 North Carolina counties. We estimated the improvement in response times (time from 9-1-1 call to AED arrival) achieved by 2 sequentialinterventions:
1) AEDs for all FRs; and 2) optimized placement of drones to maximize 5-minute AED arrival within each county. Interventions were evaluated with logistic regression models to estimate changes in initial shockable rhythm and survival.Results:
Historical county-level median response times were 8.0 minutes (IQR 7.0-9.0 minutes) with 16.5% of OHCAs having AED arrival times of <5 minutes (IQR 11.2%-24.3%). Providing all FRs with AEDs improved median response to 7.0 minutes (IQR 6.2-7.8 minutes) and increased OHCAs with <5-minute AED arrival to 22.3% (IQR 16.4%-30.9%). Further incorporating optimized drone networks (326 drones across all 48 counties) improved median response to 4.8 minutes (IQR 4.3-5.2 minutes) and OHCAs with <5-minute AED arrival to 56.3% (IQR 46.9%-64.2%). Survival rates were estimated to increase by 34% for witnessed OHCAs with estimated drone arrival <5 minutes and ahead of FR and emergency medical service.Conclusions:
Deployment of AEDs by FRs and optimized drone delivery can improve AED arrival times which may lead to improved clinical outcomes. Implementation studies are needed.
Texto completo:
1
Coleções:
01-internacional
Base de dados:
MEDLINE
Idioma:
En
Revista:
JACC Adv
Ano de publicação:
2024
Tipo de documento:
Article