Chances of surviving cardiac arrest depend on your neighbourhood
June 1st, 2010 - 1:18 pm ICT by ANIWashington, June 1 (ANI): Whether you survive a cardiac arrest may depend on the kind of neighbourhood you live in, says a new research.
In a first-of-its-kind study, researchers say if a neighbour comes to your rescue by giving you CPR (cardiopulmonary resuscitation), your chances of living are much higher.
Neighbourhoods like Atlanta have an incidence of cardiac arrest two to three times higher than other parts of the county and fewer bystanders who attempt to perform CPR, and remained so year after year - possibly owing to lower median household incomes, more Black residents, and lower education levels.
“These findings have national public health indications. They show that it is time to change our thinking on how and where we conduct CPR training if we are ever going to change the dismal rate of survival from cardiac arrest,” said Comilla Sasson, M.D., M.S., lead author of, “Small Area Variations in Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest: Does the Neighborhood Matter?” who conducted the study as a Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Clinical Scholar at the University of Michigan. “Nine out of 10 people die from a cardiac arrest event. This number can and must change.”
Boosting bystander CPR rates in the United States from the current average of 27 percent to 56 percent could save an additional 1,500 lives per year.
Because most incidences of cardiac arrest occur outside a hospital and are often witnessed by bystanders, efforts to improve survival should focus on the prompt delivery of medical interventions such as the delivery of CPR.
“To improve cardiac survival rates that have been stagnant for 30 years, CPR training should be more basic and available to the people who are most likely to witness someone experiencing cardiac arrest,” Sasson said. “Health care resources are extremely limited. To make improvements, we need to understand where and how best to make change.”
The study is published in the June issue of the Annals of Internal Medicine. (ANI)
- Odds of heart attack depend on where you live - Jun 01, 2010
- No improvement in surviving heart attack at home - Dec 03, 2009
- Chances of surviving cardiac arrest at home or work remain unchanged in 30 yrs - Dec 03, 2009
- Twitter as a lifesaver? - Nov 13, 2011
- Why hospitalized daytime cardiac arrest patients are likely to survive - Nov 15, 2010
- Study: Hands-only CPR is better than traditional CPR - Oct 07, 2010
- CPR without mouth-to-mouth breathing 'better for cardiac arrest victims' - Jul 29, 2010
- New CPR method increases survival rate by 50pc - Mar 02, 2011
- Hypothermia therapy can benefit younger cardiac patients too - Apr 04, 2011
- "Hands-Only" CPR Enough to Save Lives - Jul 30, 2010
- 'Chilled-out' device may help protect brain during heart attacks - Nov 16, 2009
- Shockable cardiac arrests 'more common in public settings than home' - Jan 27, 2011
- Hands-Only CPR Easier And Effective Say American Heart Association - Jul 30, 2010
- Hands-Only CPR A Better Cure To Save Cardiac Patients, Says New Study - Jul 30, 2010
- Oxygen during CPR improves survival - Dec 01, 2009
Tags: annals, bystander cpr, bystanders, cardiac arrest, clinical scholar, comilla, education levels, health care resources, incidences, lower education, median household incomes, medical interventions, national public health, neighbourhood, neighbourhoods, robert wood johnson foundation, sasson, study researchers, survival rates, wood johnson foundation