Association between time of day and outcomes after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest in Poland: an analysis of the EuReCa registry.
Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) has low survival rates with worse outcomes at night due to delayed emergency medical services (EMS) response, resource limitations and workforce fatigue. Since randomised trials are unfeasible, all-comers registries provide essential data to bridge evidence gaps and improve EMS protocols.
Retrospective observational study using propensity score matching.
National EMS registry and death registry data from Poland, cases from September to November 2022.
Of 2388 eligible patients, cases were grouped by time of cardiac arrest (on-hours: 7:00-18:59; off-hours: 7:00-18:59 AM) and matched 1:1 using propensity scores, yielding 1194 pairs.
Primary: return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) and 30-day survival.Secondary: EMS response time.
Our findings revealed significant disparities in OHCA outcomes between day and night shifts. ROSC rates were notably lower at night (20.9% vs 34.8%; p=0.01); however, no difference in 30-day survival was observed (8.3% vs 8.1%; p=0.94). Furthermore, EMS response times were significantly longer during nighttime hours (median and IQR): 12.4 (7.4-14.6) versus 11.2 (6.2-13.5) (minutes); p=0.01.
Patients with OHCA during off-hours experienced longer EMS response times and significantly lower rates of ROSC as compared with daytime hours. No difference in 30-day survival was observed between groups. Potential contributors include reduced staffing, fatigue and logistical delays. System-level changes in EMS scheduling and workforce planning might help to reduce time-of-day-related disparities in OHCA outcomes.
Clinical Trials ID: NCT03130088; Post results.
Retrospective observational study using propensity score matching.
National EMS registry and death registry data from Poland, cases from September to November 2022.
Of 2388 eligible patients, cases were grouped by time of cardiac arrest (on-hours: 7:00-18:59; off-hours: 7:00-18:59 AM) and matched 1:1 using propensity scores, yielding 1194 pairs.
Primary: return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) and 30-day survival.Secondary: EMS response time.
Our findings revealed significant disparities in OHCA outcomes between day and night shifts. ROSC rates were notably lower at night (20.9% vs 34.8%; p=0.01); however, no difference in 30-day survival was observed (8.3% vs 8.1%; p=0.94). Furthermore, EMS response times were significantly longer during nighttime hours (median and IQR): 12.4 (7.4-14.6) versus 11.2 (6.2-13.5) (minutes); p=0.01.
Patients with OHCA during off-hours experienced longer EMS response times and significantly lower rates of ROSC as compared with daytime hours. No difference in 30-day survival was observed between groups. Potential contributors include reduced staffing, fatigue and logistical delays. System-level changes in EMS scheduling and workforce planning might help to reduce time-of-day-related disparities in OHCA outcomes.
Clinical Trials ID: NCT03130088; Post results.
Authors
Żądło Żądło, Bednarek-Chałuda Bednarek-Chałuda, Karpińska Karpińska, Cebula Cebula, Tokarek Tokarek,
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