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Relationship between socioeconomic factors, distribution of public access defibrillators and incidence of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest
被引:37
|作者:
Dicker, Bridget
[1
,2
]
Garrett, Nick
[3
]
Wong, Samuel
[2
]
McKenzie, Helen
[10
]
McCarthy, John
[5
]
Jenkin, Gareth
[6
]
Smith, Tony
[2
]
Skinner, Jonathan R.
[4
]
Pegg, Tammy
[11
]
Devlin, Gerry
[7
,8
]
Swain, Andrew
[1
]
Scott, Tony
[9
]
Todd, Verity
[1
,2
]
机构:
[1] Auckland Univ Technol, Paramed Dept, Auckland, New Zealand
[2] St John New Zealand, Clin Audit & Res, Auckland, New Zealand
[3] Auckland Univ Technol, Biostat & Epidemiol Dept, Auckland, New Zealand
[4] Starship Childrens Hosp, Paediat & Congenital Cardiac Serv, Auckland, New Zealand
[5] Minist Hlth, Wellington, New Zealand
[6] AED Locat, Auckland, New Zealand
[7] Gisbourne Hosp, Tairawhiti Dist Hlth, Gisbourne, New Zealand
[8] Heart Fdn NZ, Auckland, New Zealand
[9] Waitemata Dist Hlth Board, Cardiol, Auckland, New Zealand
[10] Northern Reg Alliance, Auckland, New Zealand
[11] Nelson Marlborough Dist Hlth Board, Cardiol, Nelson, New Zealand
来源:
关键词:
Automated external defibrillator (AED);
Public access defibrillator (PAD);
Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA);
Deprivation;
Ethnicity;
Resuscitation;
Bystander;
Defibrillation;
Cardiopulmonary resuscitation;
CARDIOPULMONARY-RESUSCITATION;
NEIGHBORHOOD CHARACTERISTICS;
UNITED-STATES;
SURVIVAL;
ASSOCIATION;
COMMUNITIES;
SCIENCE;
RATES;
D O I:
10.1016/j.resuscitation.2019.02.022
中图分类号:
R4 [临床医学];
学科分类号:
1002 ;
100602 ;
摘要:
Background: Survival from out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) is improved when public access defibrillators are used. Areas of socioeconomic deprivation may have higher rates of OHCA and thus a greater demand for public access defibrillators. We aimed to determine if there was a relationship between socioeconomic factors, the geographic distribution of public access defibrillators (PADs) and incidence of OHCA. Method: Socioeconomic deprivation data was obtained from the Census-based 2013 Index of Deprivation. Spatial information for PADs was obtained from a New Zealand PAD database (AED Locations) in 2016 and 2018. Location data for OHCA was obtained from the St John New Zealand OHCA registry for the period 1 October 2013 to 30 June 2016. Relationships between these variables were analysed using a Poisson regression analysis. Results: Cardiac arrest incidence increased with increasing deprivation. The incidence in the most deprived areas of 156.5 events per 100,000 person years (135.4-180.9, 95% CI) is double the incidence in the least deprived areas at 78.0 events per 100,000 person years (66.4-91.7, 95% CI). Significant increases in the rates of OHCA were observed with every 1% increase in proportions of Maori (1.0%, 0.61-1.4%, 95% CI, p = 0.001), Pacific Peoples (0.6%, 0.21-0.9%, p = 0.005), >65 year olds (3.7%, 3.0-4.3%, p < 0.001), and males (3.7 %, 1.8-5.6%, p > 0.001). In 2018, the decile 10 areas had the lowest coverage of PADs (65% of these areas contained a PAD) compared with less deprived areas (68-84%, median 81%). Conclusions: The most socioeconomically deprived communities had the highest incidence of OHCA and the least availability of PADs. This provides impetus for targeted PAD placement in areas of higher deprivation.
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页码:53 / 58
页数:6
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