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Cited by (128)
EuReCa ONE—27 Nations, ONE Europe, ONE Registry: A prospective one month analysis of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest outcomes in 27 countries in Europe
2016, ResuscitationCitation Excerpt :Of particular note are the Cardiac Arrest Registry to Enhance Survival (CARES), the Resuscitation Outcomes Consortium Epistry (ROC) in North America, the All-Japan Utstein Registry, and the Pan-Asian Resuscitation Outcomes Registry (PAROS).36 During the last decades a number of registries for OHCA have been implemented in Europe.717 These registries cover varied parts of the participating countries.
A comprehensive investigation of cardiac arrest before and after arrival of emergency medical services
2010, ResuscitationCitation Excerpt :A few studies have reported demographic trends and survival in patients who arrested after arrival as their primary objective.7–14 Additionally, other studies have reported data on patients who arrested after arrival secondary to other purposes.15–27 Like our study, most of these papers reported around 10% of all cardiac arrests occurred after arrival of EMS, though proportions varied from less than 5% in Ketchikan, Alaska20 and Alachua County, Florida,25 to over 30% on San Juan Island, Washington.15
Evaluation of the Outcome of Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest Resuscitation Efforts in Denizli, Turkey
2008, Journal of Emergency MedicineCitation Excerpt :In the literature, overall revival rates for patients who suffered OHCA have been reported to vary between 1.4% and 23% (10,13). Only a minority of patients (4–35%) after OHCA are discharged alive from the hospital (8,22–25). When we compared several studies reported from other countries with similar EMS systems to ours it was observed that, in a study of 266 patients with treated OHCA, return of spontaneous circulation was achieved in 83 (31%) patients, 31 (12%) were discharged alive (26).
The epidemiology of non-traumatic prehospital sudden death in Macau
2007, Resuscitation