Ann
Emerg Med 1994 Dec;24(6):1147-50
Do blacks get bystander cardiopulmonary resuscitation as often as whites?
Brookoff D, Kellermann AL, Hackman BB, Somes G, Dobyns P.
Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Tennessee, Memphis.
STUDY OBJECTIVE: To determine whether there is an association
between the race of a victim of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest and the
provision of bystander-initiated CPR.
DESIGN: Record review of 1,068 consecutive cases of nontraumatic
out-of-hospital cardiac arrest.
SETTING: Memphis, Tennessee, a city of more than 600,000
with roughly equal numbers of white and black residents.
PARTICIPANTS: Every adult who was seen by municipal emergency
medical services personnel for nontraumatic cardiac arrest between March
1, 1989, and June 5, 1992.
INTERVENTION: None.
RESULTS: Although black and white cardiac arrest victims
were similar in many respects, black victims received bystander CPR substantially
less frequently than whites (9.8% versus 21.4%; odds ratio, 0.46; 95%
confidence interval, 0.34 to 0.61). This difference was slightly more
pronounced when the victim collapsed in a public place. In addition to
race of the victim, location of the arrest outside the home and having
the arrest witnessed were independent determinants of whether a victim
was given bystander CPR. Multiple logistic regression analysis showed
that the effect of race was independent of the other variables studied.
CONCLUSION: Black victims of out-of-hospital cardiac
arrest receive bystander CPR less frequently than white victims. Targeted
training programs may be needed to improve the rates of bystander CPR
among certain groups.
PMID: 7978598 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]