Incidence and Outcomes of Out‐of‐Hospital Cardiac Arrest in Singapore and Victoria: A Collaborative Study

Author:

Lim Shir Lynn1ORCID,Smith Karen23,Dyson Kylie23ORCID,Chan Siew Pang45,Earnest Arul3,Nair Resmi2,Bernard Stephen236,Leong Benjamin Sieu‐Hon7,Arulanandam Shalini8,Ng Yih Yng910,Ong Marcus Eng Hock1112ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Cardiology National University Heart Centre Singapore

2. Center for Research and Evaluation Ambulance Victoria Doncaster Victoria Australia

3. Department of Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine Monash University Victoria Australia

4. Department of Medicine Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine Singapore

5. Cardiovascular Research Institute National University Heart Centre Singapore

6. Intensive Care Department The Alfred Hospital Melbourne Victoria Australia

7. Emergency Department National University Hospital Singapore

8. Medical Department Singapore Civil Defence Force Singapore

9. Home Team Medical Service Division Ministry of Home Affairs Singapore

10. Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine Nanyang Technological University Singapore

11. Department of Emergency Medicine Singapore General Hospital Singapore

12. Health Services and Systems Research Duke‐NUS Medical School Singapore

Abstract

Background Incidence and outcomes of out‐of‐hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) vary between communities. We aimed to examine differences in patient characteristics, prehospital care, and outcomes in Singapore and Victoria. Methods and Results Using the prospective Singapore Pan‐Asian Resuscitation Outcomes Study and Victorian Ambulance Cardiac Arrest Registry, we identified 11 061 and 32 003 emergency medical services‐attended adult OHCAs between 2011 and 2016 respectively. Incidence and survival rates were directly age adjusted using the World Health Organization population. Survival was analyzed with logistic regression, with model selection via backward elimination. Of the 11 061 and 14 834 emergency medical services‐treated OHCAs (overall mean age±SD 65.5±17.2; 67.4% males) in Singapore and Victoria respectively, 11 054 (99.9%) and 5595 (37.7%) were transported, and 440 (4.0%) and 2009 (13.6%) survived. Compared with Victoria, people with OHCA in Singapore were older (66.7±16.5 versus 64.6±17.7), had less shockable rhythms (17.7% versus 30.3%), and received less bystander cardiopulmonary resuscitation (45.7% versus 58.5%) and defibrillation (1.3% versus 2.5%) (all P <0.001). Age‐adjusted OHCA incidence and survival rates increased in Singapore between 2011 and 2016 ( P <0.01 for trend), but remained stable, though higher, in Victoria. Likelihood of survival increased significantly ( P <0.001) with arrest in public locations (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] 1.81), witnessed arrest (aOR 2.14), bystander cardiopulmonary resuscitation (aOR 1.72), initial shockable rhythm (aOR 9.82), and bystander defibrillation (aOR 2.04) but decreased with increasing age (aOR 0.98) and emergency medical services response time (aOR 0.91). Conclusions Singapore reported increasing OHCA incidence and survival rates between 2011 and 2016, compared with stable, albeit higher, rates in Victoria. Survival differences might be related to different emergency medical services practices including patient selection for resuscitation and transport.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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