自动体外除颤器(AED)锁定柜对心脏骤停和 AED 结果的影响:范围界定综述

IF 2.1 Q3 CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE
Lawrence Oonyu , Gavin D. Perkins , Christopher M. Smith , Christian Vaillancourt , Theresa M. Olasveengen , Janet E. Bray , on behalf of the ILCOR BLS Task Force
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景使用自动体外除颤器(AED)进行快速公共除颤对于提高院外心脏骤停患者的存活率至关重要。由于对 AED 失窃和人为破坏的担忧,人们开始采取包括锁定柜在内的安全措施。作为国际复苏联络委员会证据审查的一部分,本范围审查探讨了将自动体外除颤器(AED)固定在上锁柜中的影响。纳入的研究类型或设计不限,均以英文摘要形式发表,研究了上锁 AED 柜的影响。结果我们筛选了 2,096 篇文章,发现了 10 项相关研究:8 项观察性研究(4 项以会议摘要形式发表)和 2 项模拟研究。没有一项研究报告了患者的结果。研究报告了 36 至 31,938 个 AED 的数据。大多数研究报告了较低的失窃/遗失/破坏率(<2%),包括全天候可用的 AED。唯一一项比较未上锁和上锁柜子的研究显示,失窃率和人为破坏率的差异很小(0.3% 对 0.1%)。两项模拟研究显示,当使用额外的安全措施(包括上锁的柜子)时,AED 的检索速度明显较慢。一项针对急救人员的调查报告显示,半数(25/50)急救人员在取用需要打破玻璃才能取用的自动体外除颤器时受伤。需要对这一主题进行研究,重点关注现实生活中的取回情况和患者的治疗效果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The impact of locked cabinets for automated external defibrillators (AEDs) on cardiac arrest and AED outcomes: A scoping review

Background

Rapid public defibrillation with automated external defibrillators (AEDs) is critical to improving out-of-hospital cardiac arrest survival. Concerns about AED theft and vandalism have led to implementing security measures, including locked cabinets. This scoping review, conducted as part of the evidence review for the International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation, explores the impact of securing AEDs in locked cabinets.

Methods

Searches of Medline, Embase, Cochrane, CINAHL (from database inception to 25/5/2024) and Google Scholar (first 200 articles). Studies of any type or design, published with an English abstract, examining the impact of locked AED cabinets were included. The included studies were grouped by outcomes, and an iterative narrative synthesis was performed.

Results

We screened 2,096 titles and found 10 relevant studies: 8 observational studies (4 published as conference abstracts) and 2 simulation studies. No study reported patient outcomes. Studies reported data on between 36 and 31,938 AEDs. Most studies reported low rates (<2%) of theft/missing/vandalism, including AEDs that were accessible 24/7. The only study comparing unlocked and locked cabinets showed minimal difference in theft and vandalism rates (0.3% vs. 0.1%). Two simulation studies showed significantly slower AED retrieval when additional security measures, included locked cabinets, were used. A survey of first responders reported half (25/50) were injured while accessing an AED that required breaking glass to access.

Conclusion

The limited literature suggests that vandalism and the loss of AEDs are rare and occur in locked and unlocked cabinets. Research on this topic is needed that focuses on real-life retrieval and patient outcomes.
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来源期刊
Resuscitation plus
Resuscitation plus Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine, Emergency Medicine
CiteScore
3.00
自引率
0.00%
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审稿时长
52 days
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