2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.resuscitation.2015.09.390
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Time to identify cardiac arrest and provide dispatch-assisted cardio-pulmonary resuscitation in a criteria-based dispatch system

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Cited by 76 publications
(73 citation statements)
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“…In 20% they did ask if the patient was breathing but misinterpreted answers confirming breathing as a sign of circulation when specific type of breathing never was described (30). These findings are supported by Dami et al who found that half of all missed OHCA cases were due to poor breathing assessment (27). Introduction of, and adherence to, scripted protocols for delivering T-CPR are indicated as effective measures to improve recognition of cardiac arrest (32,(82)(83)(84).…”
Section: Telephone-assisted Cpr Instructionsmentioning
confidence: 73%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In 20% they did ask if the patient was breathing but misinterpreted answers confirming breathing as a sign of circulation when specific type of breathing never was described (30). These findings are supported by Dami et al who found that half of all missed OHCA cases were due to poor breathing assessment (27). Introduction of, and adherence to, scripted protocols for delivering T-CPR are indicated as effective measures to improve recognition of cardiac arrest (32,(82)(83)(84).…”
Section: Telephone-assisted Cpr Instructionsmentioning
confidence: 73%
“…Recognition of cardiac arrest is challenging both for bystanders and EMDs, mainly due to the presence of agonal breathing (27)(28)(29)(30)(31)(32). Studies on recognition of cardiac arrest by EMDs report wide variations; between 56 and 98% of OHCA are recognised by EMDs (27,30,(32)(33)(34)(35)(36)(37). Failure to recognise cardiac arrest during emergency calls is associated with decreased survival (30).…”
Section: Figure 1 the Chain Of Survivalmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although, the Danish healthcare system is free, some patients bypass the dispatch system or public prehospital transport, and arrive on their own accord. In contrast to other diseases as trauma [25], cardiac arrest [26, 27], acute myocardial infarction [28] and stroke [29, 30], septic patients, to a lesser extent, arrived by public prehospital transport. In our study, part of the explanation for patients arriving without public pre-hospital transport could be the short distances with low traffic load.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Swift recognition of cardiac arrest and activation of the emergency medical service system would allow professional first responders to arrive at the scene faster, provide high quality CPR, and apply AED. In a Swedish study that analyzed 1,254 cardiac arrest records of emergency medical dispatchers, it took 1 minute (median) to recognize cardiac arrest, and it took lay people 3.67 minutes to begin CPR 34) . There has as yet been no report about recognition of cardiac arrest to 119 activation in Korea.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%