| Literature DB >> 18341789 |
Katie A Meyer1, Kathy Decker, Cynthia A Mervis, Danielle Louder, Jay Bradshaw, Shannon DeVader, Debra Wigand.
Abstract
Rapid access to medical treatment is a key determinant of outcomes for cardiovascular events. Emergency medical services (EMS) play an important role in delivering early treatment for acute cardiovascular events. Attention has increased on the potential for EMS data to contribute to our understanding of prehospital treatment. Maine recently began to explore the possible role of EMS data in cardiovascular disease surveillance and cardiovascular health program planning and evaluation. We describe the Maine EMS data system, discuss findings on ease of data use and data quality, provide a sample of findings, and share how we plan to use EMS data for program planning and evaluation of community-level interventions and to partner with EMS provider organizations to improve treatment. Our objective is to increase understanding of the promise and limitations of using EMS data for cardiovascular disease surveillance and program planning and evaluation.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18341789 PMCID: PMC2396959
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Prev Chronic Dis ISSN: 1545-1151 Impact factor: 2.830
Figure 1Cumulative probability distribution for response time (minutes) for cardiac-related events, Maine EMS, 2000–2004. Response time is defined as the interval starting with the notification of the EMS unit by dispatch and ending with the unit's arrival on scene. Response time ranged from 1 minute to 84 minutes. EMS indicates emergency medical services.
Figure 2Cumulative probability distribution for total call time (minutes) for cardiac-related events, Maine EMS, 2000–2004. Total call time was defined as starting with notification of the ambulance unit by dispatch and ending with the unit's arrival at the destination. Total call time ranged from 3 minutes to 353 minutes. EMS indicates emergency medical services.
Rates per 10,000 Population of Cardiac-Related Events Using EMS and Hospitalization Data, Maine, 2000–2004
| Variable | EMS Cardiac Events | Hospitalization | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||
| Acute MI | Coronary Heart Disease | Diseases of the Heart | Cardiovascular Disease | ||
|
| |||||
| 0-44 | 22.3 | 3.7 | 7.4 | 13.8 | 17.2 |
| 45-64 | 108.0 | 46.8 | 118.3 | 173.0 | 211.2 |
| 65-74 | 276.5 | 121.6 | 317.4 | 560.2 | 709.9 |
| ≥75 | 38.0 | 216.8 | 413.0 | 944.7 | 1225.4 |
|
| |||||
| Male | 101.2 (102.4) | 44.7 (46.4) | 103.9 (109.2) | 176.3 (181.3) | 220.2 (225.6) |
| Female | 88.8 (109.6) | 24.5 (31.3) | 53.9 (67.7) | 111.9 (142.2) | 144.3 (183.5) |
|
| 94.7 (106.1) | 33.9 (38.6) | 77.0 (87.9) | 141.4 (161.3) | 178.9 (204.0) |
EMS indicates emergency medical services; MI, myocardial infarction.
EMS personnel complete a run report for each service call they receive. The run report includes a list of possible medical reasons for the call. EMS personnel indicate what they believe most accurately describes the type of problem experienced by the patient; possible CVD events are listed as "cardiac" and "CVA" (cerebrovascular accident).
Hospitalizations include admissions of Maine residents with a primary discharge diagnosis of acute myocardial infarction (ICD-9-CM code 410), coronary heart disease (ICD-9-CM codes 402, 410–414, and 429.2), diseases of the heart (ICD-9-CM codes 390–398, 402, 404, and 410–429), or cardiovascular disease (ICD-9-CM codes 390–448). ICD-9-CM indicates International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification (6).