Cooking the Books? Measuring Cardiac Arrest Survival Rates
A series of articles in USA Today last year looked at the 50 most populous cities in the United States and found cardiac arrest survival rates ranging from nearly zero to claims by some cities of survival rates topping 20%.
I had the opportunity to attend a life-saving ceremony about 15 years ago. The EMS service involved was featuring and touting its EMTs and paramedics as walking messiahs who could bring virtually anyone back from the dead. One EMT or paramedic after another paraded onto the stage to receive a medal for bringing someone back to life after the patient’s heart and lungs stopped functioning. At one point, the ceremony was stopped, and the master of ceremonies asked one paramedic to turn and face the crowd as he proclaimed that this individual was responsible for saving eight people in the previous year.
Wow! That was fantastic. I thought this guy must be like one of those preachers I see on television who can lay hands on someone and cure a disease that had plagued the person for years.
The ceremony continued and the long line of employees continued to parade onto the stage as family, friends and fellow employees applauded their achievements. After the ceremony, there was plenty of picturing taking as the EMTs and paramedics held up their awards for the cameras or posed for group photos.
At the eat-and-greet function after the ceremony, I told the EMS division chief that it would be great if some of the cardiac arrest survivors could have been at the ceremony to be reunited with their rescuers. The division chief replied that the department could find only one such survivor and that the person was already scheduled to be out of the country on a cruise.
Wait a minute – you’re telling me that out of all these saves that you handed out medals for today, you could only find one patient? Yes, the division chief confirmed. I told him I did not understand. He explained that the agency defined a “save” as anytime a paramedic restored a heartbeat on a patient and the person made it to the floor of the hospital. He said the agency also considered anything a “save” if the emergency room restored a heartbeat and the patient made it to the floor after the crew began resuscitation efforts in the field.
What happens, I asked the division chief, if the patient dies on the hospital floor three days later or remains the rest of his or her life on a respirator because there is no brain function? The division chief said that his service still considered that a “save.” I left the ceremony a bit confused, since I considered a “save” someone who walked out of a hospital.
A series of articles in USA Today last year looked at the 50 most populous cities in the United States and found cardiac arrest survival rates ranging from nearly zero to claims by some cities of survival rates topping 20%. The series made some cities look terrible at saving victims of cardiac arrest while other cities like Seattle (45% save rate), Boston (40%) Kansas City (20%), San Francisco (22%), Houston (21%), Tulsa (26%) and Oklahoma City (27%) looked great. Why the discrepancy? Were the other cities so bad or were places like Seattle and Boston so good?
Part of the secret of success may be the system, but the way in which cities measure cardiac arrest survival rates can provide favorable or unfavorable statistics. It all depends on how some cities measure cardiac arrest survival or, as one may suggest, “cook the books.”
The cities that can claim cardiac arrest survival rates over 20% use a standard for measuring cardiac arrest survival called the Utstein template. In the 1980s, all around the world, the survival of cardiac arrest victims was measured in different ways and different formats. In response to these differences, the Utstein template came about after an international group of scientists met in June 1990 to address their concerns with research involving out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. These scientists met at the Utstein Abbey in Stavanger, Norway.
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