| Literature DB >> 34945015 |
Andrea Scapigliati1,2, Drieda Zace2,3, Tasuku Matsuyama4, Luca Pisapia1, Michela Saviani1, Federico Semeraro2,5, Giuseppe Ristagno2,6,7, Patrizia Laurenti3, Janet E Bray8, Robert Greif9,10.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Early intervention of bystanders (the first links of the chain of survival) have been shown to improve survival and good neurological outcomes of patients suffering out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA). Many initiatives have been implemented to increase the engagement of communities in early basic life support (BLS) and cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR), especially of lay people with no duty to respond. A better knowledge of the most effective initiatives might help improve survival and health system organization. Aim of the scoping review: To assess the impact of specific interventions involving lay communities on bystander BLS rates and other consistent clinical outcomes, and to identify relevant knowledge gaps.Entities:
Keywords: basic life support; bystander cardiopulmonary resuscitation; cardiopulmonary resuscitation; community initiatives; out-of-hospital cardiac arrest; outcome; scoping review
Year: 2021 PMID: 34945015 PMCID: PMC8703423 DOI: 10.3390/jcm10245719
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Characteristics and outcomes of the included studies.
| Author Year | Design | Population | Intervention(s) | Main Findings | Comments |
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| Eisenberg 1995 [ | Randomized controlled trial | 17,318 households: 8659 households intervention and 8659 household control. | Self-training: via a free, mailed 10-min CPR training videotape, a brochure and pocket card illustrating CPR steps. | No impact of the intervention on rates of bystander CPR 47% vs. 53% ( | |
| Hansen 2015 [ | Prospective cohort study, | Community members offered training. | Instructor-led training offered at major civic events, in public places and to patients with cardiovascular disease and their family members. | Associated increase rates of survival with favourable neurological outcome in patients who received CPR [7.1% (95% CI, 5.8–8.8%) in 2010 to 9.7% (95% CI, 8.2–11.4%) in 2013 ( | |
| Fordyce 2017 [ | Prospective cohort study | Community members offered training. | Instructor-led training offered at major civic events, in public places and to patients with cardiovascular disease and their family members. | Increase in favourable | |
| Bergamo 2016 [ | Retrospective cohort study | Community residents | Take 10 | 1.09% ( | |
| Boland 2017 [ | Retrospective before-after study | Community residents in areas of training | Heart Safe Communities. | 9% ( | |
| Del Rios 2018 [ | Prospective before-after study | 71 students and 347 friends and relatives | Instructor-led and self-training. | Proportion of population trained: 71 students were trained for CPR, who later trained other 347 friends and family members. Proportion of population trained: 1: 4.9 people | |
| Uber 2018 [ | Retrospective before-after study | 1486 cardiac arrest patients (899 P1 and 587 P2). 2253 passers were trained. | Instructor-led, CO-CPR, 1 day training in public places. On a single day, prehospital providers trained a convenience sample of 2253 passers-by in CO-CPR. | Bystander CPR training was not associated with bystander CPR frequency ( | |
| Nielsen 2012 [ | Prospective cohort study | 11679 people trained. 35 witnessed by bystander OHCA | Short 24-min DVD-based-self-instruction BLS courses were offered to laypersons. | 9226 people (22% of the population) completed the short course and 2453 (6% of the population) completed the 4-h course. For the witnessed OHCAs (N = 35) the bystander BLS rate increased [22% vs. 74% (95% CI 58–86). No change in survival to hospital discharge [11% (95% CI 4–27)] | |
| Nielsen 2014 [ | Prospective cohort study | 124 patients with OHCA in the follow up and 90 in the intervention period. | 1. 24-min DVD-based-self-instruction BLS courses. | Improvement in bystander CPR rate [70% (95% CI 61–77) vs. 47% (95% CI 37–57), | |
| Isbye 2007 [ | Prospective cohort study | 1877 OHCAs. Population trained: 35 002 at 806 primary Schools. | Instructor-led (School: first tier) and peer to peer (Family: second tier) training. | Population trained: mean, 2.5 persons per pupil; 95% CI 2.4–2.5 | |
| Tay 2019 [ | Prospective Before-after study | 1241 OHCA, 880 before, 361 after. Close to 30,000 individuals were trained in CPR | The Save-A-life (SAL) initiative offered free training in chest-compression only | Higher survival (3.3% vs. 2.2% | |
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| Becker 1999 [ | Non-randomized controlled study | 2075 OHCAs, 1786 in the “before” period and 289 in the “during” period. 1099 in the intervention communities and 976 in the comparison communities. | Two 30-s Public Service Announcements (PSA) demonstrating CPR for 8 months. Each featured an older couple with the husband experiencing a witnessed cardiac arrest at home and the wife calling 911 and initiating CPR. | Increased bystander CPR rate (43% vs. 55%, | |
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| Wissenberg 2013 [ | Prospective cohort study | A study population of 19,468 OHCA patients. | Bundle intervention | Increased bystander CPR (21.1% vs. 40.9% | |
| Ro 2016 [ | Cross-sectional study | 228,921 responders from 253 counties. 29,052 OHCAs. 4 quartiles Q1 (lower level of capacity) to Q4 (highest level of capacities). | CPR training programs were developed in the early 2000s. The recent guideline for layperson CPR was released in 2011, which outlines 1-h layperson training on CO-CPR, 1.5 to 2 h of first responder training on chest compression with rescue ventilation CPR, and advanced cardiovascular life support training for professional providers. Enforcement of the EMS Act requires mandatory training of all first responders. | Bystander CPR. Of 29,052 OHCA patients with presumed cardiac origin, 11,079 (38.1%) received bystander CPR. | |
| Hwang 2017 [ | Prospective Before-after study | 581 OHCA, divided into three period groups: before (2009–2010) transition (2011) and after (2012–2013) | The university hospital developed the system-wide CPR program for OHCA patients which included interventions at prehospital and | CPR education: 1760 people in 2009, 3394 in 2010, 682 in 2011, 3659 in 2012, and 5994 in 2013. Increased bystander CPR rate (without dispatcher assistance) (13.2% vs. 27.7% ( | |
| Ro 2019 [ | Cross-sectional study | 81,250 OHCAs in 254 counties. 228,452 participants responded to the survey of 247 items Classification in quartiles: the highest (Q1), higher (Q2), lower (Q3), and lowest (Q4) counties. | Public CPR campaigns and training for laypersons | Bystander CPR: Q1 63.8% vs. Q4 60.1, OR 1.16 (1.04–1.29) AOR 1.29 (1.13–1.48). |
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| Nishiyama 2019 [ | Prospective cohort study | 57,173 residents (14.7%) completed the chest compression–only CPR training and 32,423 (8.3%) completed conventional CPR training. 722 patients with OHCA were eligible for the analysis | 1. The Toyonaka City Fire Department has provided a conventional 3-h CPR training consisting of chest compressions, rescue breathing, and AED use and an instructor training course to the residents at companies, governmental offices, and nursing homes. | Proportion of TP:23% of the residents. No increase in bystander CPR: 43.3% in 2010 vs. 42.0% in 2015 ( | |
| Kim 2019 [ | Retrospective, Before-After Study | 1155 OHCAs, 777 from the pre-intervention period and 378 from the post-intervention period | “Train the trainer” instruction to EMS dispatchers who are responsible for instructing bystanders in CPR. | Bystander CPR before and after intervention 13.2% vs. 37.4% (risk difference [RD] 24.2%; 95% CI, 18.2%–29.4%). | |
| Cone 2020 [ | Retrospective cohort | HEARTSafe-designated | CPR training, availability of automated external defibrillators (AEDs) on first responder vehicles and through public access defibrillation initiatives, and availability of post-arrest therapeutic hypothermia and percutaneous coronary intervention at receiving hospitals. | No improvement in Bystander CPR. Lay person 399 (25.45%) in HEART Safe communities vs. 337 (24.91%) in non HEART Safe. CPR performed by bystander vs other. |
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Figure 1Flowchart of the screening process.
The impact of each intervention on the assessed outcomes.
| Intervention | Outcomes [Reference] | |||||||||
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| Survival to Hospital Discharge with Good Neurological Outcome | Survival to Hospital Discharge | ROSC | Bystander CPR Rate | Proportion of Trained People | ||||||
| Mass-Media Campaigns | 1 [ | |||||||||
| Community Training Programms | 2 [ | 2 [ | 2 [ | 4 [ | 1 [ | 1 [ | 7 [ | 3 [ | 3 [ | - |
| Bundle Interventions | - | 1 [ | - | 1 [ | - | - | 4 [ | 3 [ | 2 [ | |
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* Only in public. ** Only at home. *** In public and at home.