Annals of Emergency Medicine
Volume 33, Issue 2 , Pages 174-184, February 1999

A Prospective, Population-Based Study of the Demographics, Epidemiology, Management, and Outcome of Out-of-Hospital Pediatric Cardiopulmonary Arrest☆☆

From the Departments of Pediatrics* and Medicine, Baylor College of Medicine; Texas Children’s Hospital;§ the Houston Fire Department,|| Houston, Texas ; and the Departments of Emergency Medicine and Pediatrics, and the School of Public Health,# Allegheny University of the Health Sciences, Pittsburgh, PA

Received 24 June 1997; received in revised form 6 November 1997, 16 April 1998 and 11 June 1998; accepted 25 June 1998.

Abstract 

Study Objectives: To perform a population-based study addressing the demography, epidemiology, management, and outcome of out-of-hospital pediatric cardiopulmonary arrest (PCPA). Methods: Prospective, population-based study of all children (17 years of age or younger) in a large urban municipality who were treated by EMS personnel for apneic, pulseless conditions. Data were collected prospectively for 3 ½ years using a comprehensive data collection tool and on-line computerized database. Each child received standard pediatric advanced cardiac life support. Results: During the 3 ½-year period, 300 children presented with PCPA (annual incidence of 19.7/100,000 at risk). Of these, 60% (n=181) were male (P =.0003), and 54% (n=161) were patients 12 months of age or younger (152,500 at risk). Compared with the population at risk (32% black patients, 36% Hispanic patients, 26% white patients), a disproportionate number of arrests occurred in black children (51.6% versus 26.6% in Hispanics, and 17% in white children; P <.0001). Over 60% of all cases (n=181) occurred in the home with family members present, and yet those family members initiated basic CPR in only 31 (17%) of such cases. Only 33 (11%) of the total 300 PCPA cases had a return of spontaneous circulation, and 5 of the 6 discharged survivors had significant neurologic sequelae. Only 1 factor, endotracheal intubation, was correlated positively with return of spontaneous circulation (P =.032). Conclusion: This population-based study underscores the need to investigate new therapeutic interventions for PCPA, as well as innovative strategies for improving the frequency of basic CPR for children.

[Sirbaugh PE, Pepe PE, Shook JE, Kimball KT, Goldman MJ, Ward MA, Mann DM: A prospective, population-based study of the demographics, epidemiology, management, and outcome of out-of-hospital pediatric cardiopulmonary arrest. Ann Emerg Med February 1999;33:174-184.]

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 Address for reprints: paul E Pepe, MD, MPH, Department of Emergency Medicine, Allegheny University Hospitals, Allegheny General, 320 East North Avenue, Pittsburgh, PA 15212-4772; 412-359-6180, fax 412-359-8874.

☆☆ 47/1/95318

PII: S0196-0644(99)70391-4

Annals of Emergency Medicine
Volume 33, Issue 2 , Pages 174-184, February 1999