A hypothetical implementation of 'Termination of Resuscitation' protocol for out-of-hospital cardiac arrest.

dc.contributor.author

Nazeha, Nuraini

dc.contributor.author

Ong, Marcus Eng Hock

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Limkakeng, Alexander T

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Ye, Jinny J

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Joiner, Anjni Patel

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Blewer, Audrey

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Shahidah, Nur

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Nadarajan, Gayathri Devi

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Mao, Desmond Renhao

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Graves, Nicholas

dc.date.accessioned

2021-10-01T14:52:44Z

dc.date.available

2021-10-01T14:52:44Z

dc.date.issued

2021-06

dc.date.updated

2021-10-01T14:52:43Z

dc.description.abstract

Background

Out-of-hospital cardiac arrests with negligible chance of survival are routinely transported to hospital and many are pronounced dead thereafter. This leads to some potentially avoidable costs. The 'Termination of Resuscitation' protocol allows paramedics to terminate resuscitation efforts onsite for medically futile cases. This study estimates the changes in frequency of costly events that might occur when the protocol is applied to out-of-hospital cardiac arrests, as compared to existing practice.

Methods

We used Singapore data from the Pan-Asian Resuscitation Outcomes Study, from 1 Jan 2014 to 31 Dec 2017. A Markov model was developed to summarise the events that would occur in two scenarios, existing practice and the implementation of a Termination of Resuscitation protocol. The model was evaluated for 10,000 hypothetical patients with a cycle duration of 30 days after having a cardiac arrest. Probabilistic sensitivity analysis accounted for uncertainties in the outcomes: number of urgent transports and emergency treatments, inpatient bed days, and total number of deaths.

Results

For every 10,000 patients, existing practice resulted in 1118 (95% Uncertainty Interval 1117 to 1119) additional urgent transports to hospital and subsequent emergency treatments. There were 93 (95% Uncertainty Interval 66 to 120) extra inpatient bed days used, and 3 fewer deaths (95% Uncertainty Interval 2 to 4) in comparison to using the protocol.

Conclusion

The findings provide some evidence for adopting the Termination of Resuscitation protocol. This policy could lead to a reduction in costs and non-beneficial hospital admissions, however there may be a small increase in the number of avoidable deaths.
dc.identifier

S2666-5204(21)00017-5

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2666-5204

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2666-5204

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/23880

dc.language

eng

dc.publisher

Elsevier BV

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Resuscitation plus

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10.1016/j.resplu.2021.100092

dc.subject

Emergency medical services

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Markov model

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Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest

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Termination of Resuscitation

dc.title

A hypothetical implementation of 'Termination of Resuscitation' protocol for out-of-hospital cardiac arrest.

dc.type

Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Limkakeng, Alexander T|0000-0002-9822-5595

duke.contributor.orcid

Joiner, Anjni Patel|0000-0002-8907-182X

duke.contributor.orcid

Blewer, Audrey|0000-0003-2830-5191

pubs.begin-page

100092

pubs.organisational-group

School of Medicine

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Surgery, Emergency Medicine

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Duke

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Surgery

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Clinical Science Departments

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Population Health Sciences

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Family Medicine and Community Health

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Basic Science Departments

pubs.publication-status

Published

pubs.volume

6

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