P3347Pre-hospital time and 30-day mortality in patients with presumed heart conditions or dyspnea: a registry-based cohort study of patients requiring a highest priority emergency medical response

Abstract Introduction Centralization of emergency care is expected to increase average pre-hospital time for patients, leading to concerns about possible adverse outcomes for patients. Prior studies have found increased mortality for patients with prolonged transport following acute myocardial infar...

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Veröffentlicht in:European heart journal 2019-10, Vol.40 (Supplement_1)
Hauptverfasser: Mills, E H A, Aasbjerg, K, Hansen, S M, Ringgren, K B, Dahl, M, Rasmussen, B S, Torp-Pedersen, C, Soegaard, P, Kragholm, K
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract Introduction Centralization of emergency care is expected to increase average pre-hospital time for patients, leading to concerns about possible adverse outcomes for patients. Prior studies have found increased mortality for patients with prolonged transport following acute myocardial infarction. Purpose Examine the association between total pre-hospital time (from dispatch to hospital arrival) and mortality for patients, depending on the condition presumed by the emergency dispatcher (presumed heart condition, dyspnea or non-specific medial conditions). Methods Pre-hospital registry data from a Danish region from 2006–2012 was used. This contained information on ambulance dispatch priority, ambulance times, and patient condition, as well if procedures consistent with cardiac arrest (CPR or shock) were performed. We included patients with both highest priority dispatch and transport to the hospital. Linkage to nationwide registries of hospital admissions, comorbidities and mortality was performed. Logistic regression was used for analysis. Results 95% of total pre-hospital times were below 84 minutes. 30-day mortality was highest among patients with dyspnea (36.6%). Compared to pre-hospital times of 0–30 min, odds ratios of 30-day mortality for times >60 min were: for presumed heart conditions 0.54 [95% CI 0.38–0.77] (p
ISSN:0195-668X
1522-9645
DOI:10.1093/eurheartj/ehz745.0223