Aims: In-hospital cardiac arrests are often preceded by a period of physiological deterioration that has often gone unnoticed. We proposed that the same might be true for out-of-hospital cardiac arrests (OHCAs) where ambulance crews leave patients at home who then subsequently go on to suffer a cardiac arrest.
Methods and results: We identified all OHCA over a 12-month period that had been seen and assessed by an ambulance crew within the 48 h preceding their cardiac arrest. We retrospectively calculated the patient's NEWS2 score at the time of their initial assessment as a marker of their physiological status and need for hospital admission. Of 1960 OHCA patients, 184 (9.4%) had been assessed by ambulance crews within the preceding 48 h. Excluding those who had been taken to hospital (and then discharged), declined hospital conveyance or were on end-of-life care pathways, 79 (56% of total) were left at home through crew discretion. Thirty-four out of 79 (43%) patients not conveyed had either a NEWS score of 3 in a single parameter or a score of ≥5, which in hospital would mandate an urgent medical review. The most overlooked observation was respiratory rate.
Conclusions: In total, 1.7% of all OHCA had been assessed in the previous 48 h and inappropriately left at home by ambulance crews. This represents a missed opportunity to avert cardiac arrest. NEWS scoring has the potential to improve pre-hospital triage of these patients and avoid missing the deteriorating patient.
Keywords: Ambulance; Cardiac arrest; Triage.
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