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Focus on Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest

Barriers to the Initiation of Telecommunicator-CPR during 9-1-1 Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest Calls: A Qualitative Study

ORCID Icon, , , , , , , , , , , , , & show all
Pages 118-125 | Received 08 Sep 2022, Accepted 15 Feb 2023, Published online: 13 Mar 2023
 

Abstract

Introduction

Fewer than 10% of individuals who suffer out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) survive with good neurologic function. Bystander CPR more than doubles the chance of survival, and telecommunicator-CPR (T-CPR) during a 9-1-1 call substantially improves the frequency of bystander CPR.

Objective

We examined the barriers to initiation of T-CPR.

Methods

We analyzed the 9-1-1 call audio from 65 EMS-treated OHCAs from a single US 9-1-1 dispatch center. We initially conducted a thematic analysis aimed at identifying barriers to the initiation of T-CPR. We then conducted a conversation analysis that examined the interactions between telecommunicators and bystanders during the recognition phase (i.e., consciousness and normal breathing).

Results

We identified six process themes related to barriers, including incomplete or delayed recognition assessment, delayed repositioning, communication gaps, caller emotional distress, nonessential questions and assessments, and caller refusal, hesitation, or inability to act. We identified three suboptimal outcomes related to arrest recognition and delivery of chest compressions, which are missed OHCA identification, delayed OHCA identification and treatment, and compression instructions not provided following OHCA identification. A primary theme observed during missed OHCA calls was incomplete or delayed recognition assessment and included failure to recognize descriptors indicative of agonal breathing (e.g., “snoring”, “slow”) or to confirm that breathing was effective in an unconscious victim.

Conclusions

We observed that modifiable barriers identified during 9-1-1 calls where OHCA was missed, or treatment was delayed, were often related to incomplete or delayed recognition assessment. Repositioning delays were a common barrier to the initiation of chest compressions.

Disclosure Statement

SRD reports concurrent employment with the Green Oak Charter Township Fire Department.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by the American Heart Association (Grant no:19SFRN34760762 American Heart Association CENTER Arrhythmias Sudden Cardiac Death).

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