Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest Clinical Trial
Official title:
Improving Bystander CPR Quality Through Dispatcher-assisted Basic Life Support Education Program
In an attempt to enhance OHCA survival by increasing bystander CPR rate, this study will
assess the effectiveness of the new basic life support with dispatch assistance (DA-BLS)
education program through a simulation experiment.
This study aims to determine whether the new DA-BLS program for possible home bystanders is
associated with improved CPR quality. We expect home bystanders who were trained with new
DA-BLS education program to show better compliance with CPR instructions given by dispatcher
via telephone along with improved CPR quality.
Bystander cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) is a crucial component of survival after
out-of hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA). Not only the rate of bystander CPR has been
associated with higher OHCA survival rate, but the quality of bystander CPR as measured by
proportion of correct chest compression and earlier administration has been highly
indicative of positive outcomes as well.
However, bystander CPR rates have been reported to be low in many communities due to low
access to CPR training. To address this, among many attempts to improve OHCA survival,
enhancing bystander CPR rate and quality through dispatcher-assisted CPR (DA-CPR) to the
right target group may be an effective and promising approach.
In DA-CPR, the dispatcher on the emergency line provides CPR instruction over the phone.
Over-the-telephone CPR instruction was intended to primarily benefit bystanders who have
little or no training, but studies have shown that it can also benefit trained bystanders
who are in panic in emergency situations to prompt CPR administration. Trained bystanders
who received dispatcher assistance during CPR also showed improved CPR quality.
Previous studies reported that 50-81% of OHCA occurs at home. However, the outcome in
private homes was very poor compared to outside private home including public places. One
possible reason of such lower survival rate may be that the current CPR education programs
for home bystanders are inefficient in properly educating home bystanders to provide quality
CPR to the patient. In other words, despite the reported benefits of DA-CPR in both trained
and untrained bystanders, performing bystander CPR according to phone instruction provided
by the dispatcher may not be easy to follow for certain home bystanders such as women and
elderly.
According to a recent analysis of 2012 National OHCA Registry, outcomes after OHCA were
significantly lower (adjusted odds ratio; 0.36, 95% confidence intervals; 0.18-0.71) in
patients who received home bystander CPR with dispatcher assistance than in patients who
received either public or who received home bystander CPR without dispatcher assistance.
These results suggest that home bystander CPR with dispatcher assistance did not improve the
outcomes due to low compliance of CPR instruction and low CPR performance quality by home
bystanders. Considering that the in-home OHCA patients are less likely to receive bystander
CPR, there needs a new approach to optimize the low compliance rate and CPR quality in
possible home bystanders.
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Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Outcomes Assessor)
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