Researchers determine where best to place defibrillators
May 2, 2013 in Cardiology TORONTO:
Prompt use of an automated external defibrillator, or AED, can greatly increase the survival rates of people who suffer a cardiac arrest. And MIE Professor Tim Chan, working with Dr. Laurie Morrison at St. Michael's Hospital, has developed a formula to determine where best to place these costly but life-saving devices.In a paper published in Circulation, Chan and Morrison note that publicly registered AEDs in Toronto are not in the best locations to help victims of cardiac arrest. In fact, less than one in four of all cardiac arrests had an AED close by (within 100 metres is the required distance). The average distance to the nearest AED was closer to 300 meters. Current guidelines suggest areas associated with the highest risk of cardiac arrest should be targeted for AED deployment, after they have been placed in obvious high-traffic areas such as transportation hubs or major sports venues. But it's not clear how to identify these "cardiac hot spots." Timothy Chan and Morrison looked at the locations of all 1,310 public cardiac arrests in Toronto between December 2005 and July 2010 and the locations of all 1,699 AEDS registered with Toronto Emergency Medical Services. They found that 304 cardiac arrests occurred within 100 metres of at least one AED (23 per cent).One hundred metres was chosen as the yardstick because it's the approximate distance a bystander could transport an AED in a 1.5-minute walk—the maximum recommended by the American Heart Association. There were almost three times as many public cardiac arrests in downtown Toronto as the rest of the city – 3.5 per square kilometer per year vs. 0.4 – said Chan. Almost half of all downtown cardiac arrests were near an existing AED compared to only 17 per cent those outside of downtown. Chan then looked at the 1,006 cardiac arrests that did not take place near an AED. He said that be placing AEDs in the top 30 cardiac arrest "hot spots," they could have covered an additional 112 historical arrests, or 32 per cent. The average distance between a cardiac arrest and an AED would fall to 262 metres from 281 meters. "Reducing the distance a bystander needs to travel by 20 metres or up to 40 meters in a roundtrip has the potential to save close to half a minute in response time," said Morrison, an emergency medicine specialist who heads Rescu, the largest research team of its kind in Canada dedicated to improving out-of-hospital resuscitation. "If you have a cardiac arrest, every second counts. Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest kills an estimated 300,000 people in North America annually," she said. "Only five per cent of people who suffer out-of-hospital cardiac arrest survive to be discharged from hospital. The probability of survival decreases up to 10 per cent with each minute of delay between collapse and treatment." Chan said his mathematical model is more accurate than a population-based model, in which AEDs are placed in areas of densest daytime population. "Our optimization model should be viewed as a decision-support tool to help prioritize placement of AEDs, make efficient use of public, donor or private funds directed toward public access defibrillator programs, and potentially maximize survival on the basis of geographic patterns of cardiac arrest," said Chan. "Because AEDs are expensive and cannot be placed everywhere, our model allows a decision-maker to quantify the trade-off between the number of AEDS deployed and coverage."
Read more at: http://medicalxpress.com/news/2013-05-defibrillators.html#jCp
May 2, 2013 in Cardiology
TORONTO: Prompt use of an automated external defibrillator, or AED, can
greatly increase the survival rates of people who suffer a cardiac
arrest. And MIE Professor Tim Chan, working with Dr. Laurie Morrison at
St. Michael's Hospital, has developed a formula to determine where best
to place these costly but life-saving devices.
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In a paper published in Circulation, Chan and Morrison note that
publicly registered AEDs in Toronto are not in the best locations to
help victims of cardiac arrest. In fact, less than one in four of all
cardiac arrests had an AED close by (within 100 metres is the required
distance). The average distance to the nearest AED was closer to 300
meters.
Current guidelines suggest areas associated with the highest risk of
cardiac arrest should be targeted for AED deployment, after they have
been placed in obvious high-traffic areas such as transportation hubs or
major sports venues. But it's not clear how to identify these "cardiac
hot spots."
Timothy Chan and Morrison looked at the locations of all 1,310 public
cardiac arrests in Toronto between December 2005 and July 2010 and the
locations of all 1,699 AEDS registered with Toronto Emergency Medical
Services.
They found that 304 cardiac arrests occurred within 100 metres of at
least one AED (23 per cent).One hundred metres was chosen as the
yardstick because it's the approximate distance a bystander could
transport an AED in a 1.5-minute walk—the maximum recommended by the
American Heart Association.
There were almost three times as many public cardiac arrests in downtown
Toronto as the rest of the city – 3.5 per square kilometer per year vs.
0.4 – said Chan. Almost half of all downtown cardiac arrests were near
an existing AED compared to only 17 per cent those outside of downtown.
Chan then looked at the 1,006 cardiac arrests that did not take place
near an AED. He said that be placing AEDs in the top 30 cardiac arrest
"hot spots," they could have covered an additional 112 historical
arrests, or 32 per cent. The average distance between a cardiac arrest
and an AED would fall to 262 metres from 281 meters.
"Reducing the distance a bystander needs to travel by 20 metres or up to
40 meters in a roundtrip has the potential to save close to half a
minute in response time," said Morrison, an emergency medicine
specialist who heads Rescu, the largest research team of its kind in
Canada dedicated to improving out-of-hospital resuscitation.
"If you have a cardiac arrest, every second counts. Out-of-hospital
cardiac arrest kills an estimated 300,000 people in North America
annually," she said. "Only five per cent of people who suffer
out-of-hospital cardiac arrest survive to be discharged from hospital.
The probability of survival decreases up to 10 per cent with each minute
of delay between collapse and treatment."
Chan said his mathematical model is more accurate than a
population-based model, in which AEDs are placed in areas of densest
daytime population.
"Our optimization model should be viewed as a decision-support tool to
help prioritize placement of AEDs, make efficient use of public, donor
or private funds directed toward public access defibrillator programs,
and potentially maximize survival on the basis of geographic patterns of
cardiac arrest," said Chan. "Because AEDs are expensive and cannot be
placed everywhere, our model allows a decision-maker to quantify the
trade-off between the number of AEDS deployed and coverage."
Read more at: http://medicalxpress.com/news/2013-05-defibrillators.html#jCp
Read more at: http://medicalxpress.com/news/2013-05-defibrillators.html#jCp
May 2, 2013 in Cardiology
TORONTO: Prompt use of an automated external defibrillator, or AED, can
greatly increase the survival rates of people who suffer a cardiac
arrest. And MIE Professor Tim Chan, working with Dr. Laurie Morrison at
St. Michael's Hospital, has developed a formula to determine where best
to place these costly but life-saving devices.
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Dry Eye Clinical Trials - Now Running in Your Area Learn About the
DryEye Study Now! - www.HealthCentral.com/DryEyeStudy
2013 Best Skin Tighteners - An Unbiased Review List of The Top
Performing Skin Tighteners In 2013 - www.SkinCareSearch.com/FaceLifting
In a paper published in Circulation, Chan and Morrison note that
publicly registered AEDs in Toronto are not in the best locations to
help victims of cardiac arrest. In fact, less than one in four of all
cardiac arrests had an AED close by (within 100 metres is the required
distance). The average distance to the nearest AED was closer to 300
meters.
Current guidelines suggest areas associated with the highest risk of
cardiac arrest should be targeted for AED deployment, after they have
been placed in obvious high-traffic areas such as transportation hubs or
major sports venues. But it's not clear how to identify these "cardiac
hot spots."
Timothy Chan and Morrison looked at the locations of all 1,310 public
cardiac arrests in Toronto between December 2005 and July 2010 and the
locations of all 1,699 AEDS registered with Toronto Emergency Medical
Services.
They found that 304 cardiac arrests occurred within 100 metres of at
least one AED (23 per cent).One hundred metres was chosen as the
yardstick because it's the approximate distance a bystander could
transport an AED in a 1.5-minute walk—the maximum recommended by the
American Heart Association.
There were almost three times as many public cardiac arrests in downtown
Toronto as the rest of the city – 3.5 per square kilometer per year vs.
0.4 – said Chan. Almost half of all downtown cardiac arrests were near
an existing AED compared to only 17 per cent those outside of downtown.
Chan then looked at the 1,006 cardiac arrests that did not take place
near an AED. He said that be placing AEDs in the top 30 cardiac arrest
"hot spots," they could have covered an additional 112 historical
arrests, or 32 per cent. The average distance between a cardiac arrest
and an AED would fall to 262 metres from 281 meters.
"Reducing the distance a bystander needs to travel by 20 metres or up to
40 meters in a roundtrip has the potential to save close to half a
minute in response time," said Morrison, an emergency medicine
specialist who heads Rescu, the largest research team of its kind in
Canada dedicated to improving out-of-hospital resuscitation.
"If you have a cardiac arrest, every second counts. Out-of-hospital
cardiac arrest kills an estimated 300,000 people in North America
annually," she said. "Only five per cent of people who suffer
out-of-hospital cardiac arrest survive to be discharged from hospital.
The probability of survival decreases up to 10 per cent with each minute
of delay between collapse and treatment."
Chan said his mathematical model is more accurate than a
population-based model, in which AEDs are placed in areas of densest
daytime population.
"Our optimization model should be viewed as a decision-support tool to
help prioritize placement of AEDs, make efficient use of public, donor
or private funds directed toward public access defibrillator programs,
and potentially maximize survival on the basis of geographic patterns of
cardiac arrest," said Chan. "Because AEDs are expensive and cannot be
placed everywhere, our model allows a decision-maker to quantify the
trade-off between the number of AEDS deployed and coverage."
Read more at: http://medicalxpress.com/news/2013-05-defibrillators.html#jCp
Read more at: http://medicalxpress.com/news/2013-05-defibrillators.html#jCp
May 2, 2013 in Cardiology
TORONTO: Prompt use of an automated external defibrillator, or AED, can
greatly increase the survival rates of people who suffer a cardiac
arrest. And MIE Professor Tim Chan, working with Dr. Laurie Morrison at
St. Michael's Hospital, has developed a formula to determine where best
to place these costly but life-saving devices.
Ads by Google
Dry Eye Clinical Trials - Now Running in Your Area Learn About the
DryEye Study Now! - www.HealthCentral.com/DryEyeStudy
2013 Best Skin Tighteners - An Unbiased Review List of The Top
Performing Skin Tighteners In 2013 - www.SkinCareSearch.com/FaceLifting
In a paper published in Circulation, Chan and Morrison note that
publicly registered AEDs in Toronto are not in the best locations to
help victims of cardiac arrest. In fact, less than one in four of all
cardiac arrests had an AED close by (within 100 metres is the required
distance). The average distance to the nearest AED was closer to 300
meters.
Current guidelines suggest areas associated with the highest risk of
cardiac arrest should be targeted for AED deployment, after they have
been placed in obvious high-traffic areas such as transportation hubs or
major sports venues. But it's not clear how to identify these "cardiac
hot spots."
Timothy Chan and Morrison looked at the locations of all 1,310 public
cardiac arrests in Toronto between December 2005 and July 2010 and the
locations of all 1,699 AEDS registered with Toronto Emergency Medical
Services.
They found that 304 cardiac arrests occurred within 100 metres of at
least one AED (23 per cent).One hundred metres was chosen as the
yardstick because it's the approximate distance a bystander could
transport an AED in a 1.5-minute walk—the maximum recommended by the
American Heart Association.
There were almost three times as many public cardiac arrests in downtown
Toronto as the rest of the city – 3.5 per square kilometer per year vs.
0.4 – said Chan. Almost half of all downtown cardiac arrests were near
an existing AED compared to only 17 per cent those outside of downtown.
Chan then looked at the 1,006 cardiac arrests that did not take place
near an AED. He said that be placing AEDs in the top 30 cardiac arrest
"hot spots," they could have covered an additional 112 historical
arrests, or 32 per cent. The average distance between a cardiac arrest
and an AED would fall to 262 metres from 281 meters.
"Reducing the distance a bystander needs to travel by 20 metres or up to
40 meters in a roundtrip has the potential to save close to half a
minute in response time," said Morrison, an emergency medicine
specialist who heads Rescu, the largest research team of its kind in
Canada dedicated to improving out-of-hospital resuscitation.
"If you have a cardiac arrest, every second counts. Out-of-hospital
cardiac arrest kills an estimated 300,000 people in North America
annually," she said. "Only five per cent of people who suffer
out-of-hospital cardiac arrest survive to be discharged from hospital.
The probability of survival decreases up to 10 per cent with each minute
of delay between collapse and treatment."
Chan said his mathematical model is more accurate than a
population-based model, in which AEDs are placed in areas of densest
daytime population.
"Our optimization model should be viewed as a decision-support tool to
help prioritize placement of AEDs, make efficient use of public, donor
or private funds directed toward public access defibrillator programs,
and potentially maximize survival on the basis of geographic patterns of
cardiac arrest," said Chan. "Because AEDs are expensive and cannot be
placed everywhere, our model allows a decision-maker to quantify the
trade-off between the number of AEDS deployed and coverage."
Read more at: http://medicalxpress.com/news/2013-05-defibrillators.html#jCp
Read more at: http://medicalxpress.com/news/2013-05-defibrillators.html#jCp
"Our optimization model
should be viewed as a decision-support tool to help prioritize placement
of AEDs, make efficient use of public, donor or private funds directed
toward public access defibrillator programs, and potentially maximize
survival on the basis of geographic patterns of cardiac arrest," said
Chan. "Because AEDs are expensive and cannot be placed everywhere, our
model allows a decision-maker to quantify the trade-off between the
number of AEDS deployed and coverage."
Read more at: http://medicalxpress.com/news/2013-05-defibrillators.html#jCp
Read more at: http://medicalxpress.com/news/2013-05-defibrillators.html#jCp