Incidence of treated cardiac arrest in hospitalized patients in the United States*
Top Cited Papers
- 1 November 2011
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Critical Care Medicine
- Vol. 39  (11) , 2401-2406
- https://doi.org/10.1097/ccm.0b013e3182257459
Abstract
Objective: The incidence and incidence over time of cardiac arrest in hospitalized patients is unknown. We sought to estimate the event rate and temporal trends of adult inhospital cardiac arrest treated with a resuscitation response. Design: Three approaches were used to estimate the inhospital cardiac arrest event rate. First approach: calculate the inhospital cardiac arrest event rate at hospitals (n = 433) in the Get With The Guidelines-Resuscitation registry, years 2003–2007, and multiply this by U.S. annual bed days. Second approach: use the Get With The Guidelines-Resuscitation inhospital cardiac arrest event rate to develop a regression model (including hospital demographic, geographic, and organizational factors), and use the model coefficients to calculate predicted event rates for acute care hospitals (n = 5445) responding to the American Hospital Association survey. Third approach: classify acute care hospitals into groups based on academic, urban, and bed size characteristics, and determine the average event rate for Get With The Guidelines-Resuscitation hospitals in each group, and use weighted averages to calculate the national inhospital cardiac arrest rate. Annual event rates were calculated to estimate temporal trends. Setting: Get With The Guidelines-Resuscitation registry. Patients: Adult inhospital cardiac arrest with a resuscitation response. Measurements and Main Results: The mean adult treated inhospital cardiac arrest event rate at Get With The Guidelines-Resuscitation hospitals was 0.92/1000 bed days (interquartile range 0.58 to 1.2/1000). In hospitals (n = 150) contributing data for all years of the study period, the event rate increased from 2003 to 2007. With 2.09 million annual U.S. bed days, we estimated 192,000 inhospital cardiac arrests throughout the United States annually. Based on the regression model, extrapolating Get With The Guidelines-Resuscitation hospitals to hospitals participating in the American Hospital Association survey projected 211,000 annual inhospital cardiac arrests. Using weighted averages projected 209,000 annual U.S. inhospital cardiac arrests. Conclusions: There are approximately 200,000 treated cardiac arrests among U.S. hospitalized patients annually, and this rate may be increasing. This is important for understanding the burden of inhospital cardiac arrest and developing strategies to improve care for hospitalized patients.Keywords
This publication has 38 references indexed in Scilit:
- Hospital racial composition: A neglected factor in cardiac arrest survival disparitiesAmerican Heart Journal, 2011
- Heart Disease and Stroke Statistics—2011 UpdateCirculation, 2011
- The NCDR ACTION Registry-GWTG: transforming contemporary acute myocardial infarction clinical careHeart, 2010
- Racial Differences in Survival After In-Hospital Cardiac ArrestJAMA, 2009
- Epidemiologic Study of In-Hospital Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation in the ElderlyNew England Journal of Medicine, 2009
- American Heart Association/American College of Cardiology Foundation/Heart Rhythm Society Scientific Statement on Noninvasive Risk Stratification Techniques for Identifying Patients at Risk for Sudden Cardiac DeathCirculation, 2008
- Regional Variation in Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest Incidence and OutcomeJAMA, 2008
- Survival From In-Hospital Cardiac Arrest During Nights and WeekendsJAMA, 2008
- Technology Diffusion, Hospital Variation, and Racial Disparities Among Elderly Medicare BeneficiariesMedical Care, 2005
- Survival after in-hospital cardiopulmonary resuscitationJournal of General Internal Medicine, 1998