Paper profile
Use of healthcare services before and after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest.
Alm-Kruse K, Tjelmeland I, Reiner A, Kvåle R, Kramer-Johansen J
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Knowledge about the use of healthcare services in patients experiencing out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) is limited. We aimed to describe and compare the use of healthcare by OHCA survivors two years before and one year after cardiac arrest. METHODS: Adult patients with OHCA of medical cause, who survived >30 days, were identified in the Norwegian Cardiac Arrest Registry. The Norwegian Patient Registry, The Cause of Death Registry, and The Norwegian Registry for Primary Healthcare provided data on survival and the use of healthcare services. We investigated the use of primary, specialist and mental healthcare, as well as rehabilitation services. RESULTS: In 2015-2018, 13,112 OHCA cases were identified; 1435 (14%) patients survived >30 days (6.8/100,000 patients/year). The proportion of patients in the cohort that used primary healthcare each month increased form 43% before to 69% after OHCA to (p < 0.001). We found a doubling of monthly healthcare contacts in specialist healthcare (from 26% to 57%, p < 0.001) and yearly contacts for mental healthcare (from 3% to 8%, p > 0.001). The observed increases in primary, specialist and mental healthcare use started two weeks, six months, and eight months before OHCA, respectively. Half of the patients had contact with primary healthcare services on the same day as the cardiac arrest. Two out of five patients were registered for rehabilitation after OHCA. CONCLUSION: The use of primary, specialist and mental healthcare services increased before OHCA and remained significantly higher the year after OHCA. Less than half of the patients surviving cardiac arrest were registered for rehabilitation.
Study snapshot
- Setting
- OHCA
- Design
- —
- Country
- Norway
- Domains
- —
- Keywords
- —
- MeSH
- Adult, Humans, Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest, Emergency Medical Services, Registries, Health Facilities, Delivery of Health Care, Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation
Citations & exports
Related papers
[Quality of life after in-hospital cardiac arrest : An 11-year experience from an university center].
Treml B, Eckhardt C, Oberleitner C et al.
Die Anaesthesiologie • 2024
Long-term Mortality, Readmission, and Resource Utilization Among Hospital Survivors of Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest.
Fordyce CB, Grunau BE, Guan M et al.
The Canadian journal of cardiology • 2022
"We don't talk about his heart": Narrative sense-making and long-term readjustment among older out-of-hospital cardiac arrest survivors and their spouses.
Jensen AN, Bonnén KB, Kristiansen M et al.
Resuscitation plus • 2020
Health-related quality of life after surviving an out-of-hospital compared to an in-hospital cardiac arrest: A Swedish population-based registry study.
Djärv T, Bremer A, Herlitz J et al.
Resuscitation • 2020