Public-Access Defibrillation and Survival after Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest
TPThe Public Access Defibrillation Trial Investigators
University of Washington · Seattle University
Indexed incrossrefpubmed
Abstract
Background
The rate of survival after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest is low. It is not known whether this rate will increase if laypersons are trained to attempt defibrillation with the use of automated external defibrillators (AEDs).
Methods
We conducted a prospective, community-based, multicenter clinical trial in which we randomly assigned community units (e.g., shopping malls and apartment complexes) to a structured and monitored emergency-response system involving lay volunteers trained in cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) alone or in CPR and the use of AEDs. The primary outcome was survival to hospital discharge.
Citation impact
1,133
total citations
- FWCI
- 87.34
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 18
Citations per year
Authors
1- TPThe Public Access Defibrillation Trial InvestigatorsCorresponding
University of Washington, Seattle University
Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Medicine
- Defibrillation
- Automated external defibrillator
- Survival rate
- Ventricular fibrillation
- Cardiology
- Intensive care medicine
- Internal medicine
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Good health and well-being
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