The association between symptom onset characteristics and prehospital delay in women and men with acute coronary syndrome
European Journal of Cardiovascular Nursing

Abstract
A decision to delay seeking treatment for symptoms of acute coronary syndrome increases the risk of serious complications, disability, and death.
The purpose of this study was to determine if there was an association between gradual vs abrupt symptom onset and prehospital delay for patients with acute coronary syndrome and to examine the relationship between activities at symptom onset and gradual vs abrupt symptom onset.
This was a secondary analysis of a large prospective multi-center study. Altogether, 474 patients presenting to the emergency department with symptoms of acute coronary syndrome were included in the study. Symptom characteristics, activity at symptom onset, and prehospital delay were measured with the ACS Patient Questionnaire.
Median prehospital delay time was four hours. Being uninsured (β=0.120,
Patients should be counselled that a gradual onset of symptoms for potential acute coronary syndrome is an emergency and that they should call 911. Men with ischemic heart disease or with multiple risk factors should be cautioned that symptom onset following exertion may represent acute coronary syndrome.
Contributors

Sahereh Mirzaei
Author

Alana Steffen
Author

Karen Vuckovic
Author

Catherine Ryan
Author

Ulf G Bronas
Author

Jessica Zegre-Hemsey
Author

Holli A DeVon
Author

