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PRELIMINARY REPORTS

ESTIMATING COST-EFFECTIVENESS OF MASS CARDIOPULMONARY RESUSCITATION TRAINING STRATEGIES TO IMPROVE SURVIVAL FROM CARDIAC ARREST IN PRIVATE LOCATIONS

Pages 420-423 | Published online: 28 Aug 2009
 

Abstract

Introduction. Most cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) trainees are young, and most cardiac arrests occur in private residences witnessed by older individuals. Objective. To estimate the cost-effectiveness of a CPR training program targeted at citizens over the age of 50 years compared with that of current nontargeted public CPR training. Methods. A model was developed using cardiac arrest and known demographic data from a single suburban zip code (population 36,325) including: local data (1997–1999) regarding cardiac arrest locations (public vs. private); incremental survival with CPR (historical survival rate 7.8%, adjusted odds ratio for CPR 2.0); arrest bystander demographics obtained from bystander telephone interviews; zip code demographics regarding population age and distribution; and $12.50 per student for the cost of CPR training. Published rates of CPR training programs by age were used to estimate the numbers typically trained. Several assumptions were made: 1) there would be one bystander per arrest; 2) the bystander would always perform CPR if trained; 3) cardiac arrest would be evenly distributed in the population; and 4) CPR training for a proportion of the population would proportionally increase CPR provision. Rates of arrest, bystanders by age, number of CPR trainees needed to result in increased arrest survival, and training cost per life saved for a one-year study period were calculated. Results. There were 24.3 cardiac arrests per year, with 21.9 (90%) occurring in homes. In 66.5% of the home arrests, the bystander was more than 50 years old. To yield one additional survivor using the current CPR training strategy, 12,306 people needed to be trained (3,510 bystanders aged ≤50 years and 8,796 bystanders aged >50 years), which resulted in CPR provision to 7.14 additional patients. The training cost per life saved for a bystander aged ≤50 years was $313,214, and that for a bystander aged >50 years was $785,040. Using a strategy of training only those ≤50 years, 583 elders per cardiac arrest would need to be trained, with a cost of $53,383 per life saved. Conclusion. Using these assumptions, current CPR training strategy is not a cost-effective intervention for home cardiac arrests. The high rate of elders witnessing CPR mandates focused CPR interventions for this population.

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