Heart 1997;78:462-464 ( November )
Direct admission to the coronary care unit by the ambulance service for patients with suspected myocardial infarction
Department of Cardiology, Stobhill Hospital, Glasgow
G21 3UW, UK
Correspondence to: Dr Dunn.
Accepted for publication 4 July 1997
Background
Direct access to the coronary care unit
(CCU) for general practitioner (GP) referred cases of suspected acute
myocardial infarction (AMI) (fast track admission) substantially
reduces the time to thrombolysis. Until now, this policy has been
confined to GP referrals.
Objectives
To determine the time taken to
admission to CCU under the fast track policy (ambulance referrals and
GP referrals) and the time taken to start administration of
thrombolytics (ambulance referrals, GP referrals, and accident and
emergency referrals).
Methods
Fast track admission policy was extended
to include referrals from ambulance personnel who respond to emergency
service calls. Ambulance personnel referred cases were also examined to
see if they were referred appropriately to the CCU.
Results
100 ambulance personnel referrals and 260 GP referrals to CCU with chest pain were studied. Forty accident and
emergency referrals who had AMI requiring thrombolysis were also
studied. In the ambulance referred group the time to admission from
phone call was a median of 10 minutes (range 2 to 45), a saving of 30 minutes compared with GP referrals (median 40 minutes, range 2 to 217).
The median diagnostic electrocardiogram (ECG) to thrombolysis time was
longer in the accident and emergency referrals with AMI than either
ambulance referrals or GP referrals admitted under the fast track
policy. Diagnostic ECG to thrombolysis time: accident and emergency 50 minutes (range 15 to 385); ambulance referrals median 33 minutes (range
6 to 69); GP referrals median 29.5 minutes (range 5 to 110 minutes);
(p = 0.056 accident and emergency compared with ambulance referrals,
p < 0.002 accident and emergency compared with GP referrals). Of 100 ambulance referrals 52 patients exhibited symptoms suggestive of
ischaemic heart disease (confirmed AMI, unstable angina, and angina)
and a further 18 patients were required to stay in CCU for other
cardiac problems. Thus a total of 70 (70%) were considered appropriate
compared with 155 of 260 (55.8%) GP referred cases.
Conclusions
Extending the fast track admission
policy to ambulance personnel reduces delay to admission for patients
with suspected MI without adversely affecting the appropriateness of admissions.
© 1997 by Heart
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