Time to hospital arrival among patients with acute myocardial infarction in China: a report from China PEACE prospective study
European Heart Journal - Quality of Care and Clinical Outcomes

Abstract
Few contemporary studies have reported the time between acute myocardial infarction (AMI) symptoms onset and hospital arrival, associated factors, and patient perceptions of AMI symptoms and care seeking. We sought to study these issues using data from China, where AMI hospitalizations are increasing.
We used data from the China PEACE prospective AMI study of 53 hospitals across 21 provinces in China. Patients were interviewed during index hospitalization for information of symptom onset, and perceived barriers to accessing care. Regression analyses were conducted to explore factors associated with the time between symptom onset and hospital arrival. The final sample included 3434 patients (mean age 61 years). The median time from symptom onset to hospital arrival was 4 h (interquartile range 2–7.5 h). While 94% of patients reported chest pain or chest discomfort, only 43% perceived symptoms as heart-related. In multivariable analyses, time to hospital arrival was longer by 14% and 39% for patients failing to recognize symptoms as cardiac and those with rural medical insurance, respectively (both
We reported an average time to hospital arrival of 4 h for AMI in China, with longer time associated with rural medical insurance, failing to recognize symptoms as cardiac, and low household income. Strategies to improve the timeliness of presentation may be essential to improving outcomes for AMI in China.
Contributors

Wenchi Guan
Author

Arjun K Venkatesh
Author

Xueke Bai
Author

Si Xuan
Author

Jing Li
Author

Xi Li
Author

Haibo Zhang
Author

Xin Zheng
Author

Frederick A Masoudi
Author

John A Spertus
Author

Harlan M Krumholz
Author

Lixin Jiang
Author

