Bystander cardiopulmonary resuscitation and long-term outcomes in out-of-hospital cardiac arrest according to location of arrest
European Heart Journal

Abstract
Bystander cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) has increased in several countries following nationwide initiatives to facilitate bystander resuscitative efforts in out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA). We examined the importance of public or residential location of arrest on temporal changes in bystander CPR and outcomes.
From the nationwide Danish Cardiac Arrest Registry, all OHCAs from 2001 to 2014 of presumed cardiac cause and between 18 and 100 years of age were identified. Arrests witnessed by emergency medical services personnel were excluded. Of 25 505 OHCAs, 26.4% (
During 2001–2014, bystander CPR and 30-day survival more than doubled in both public and residential OHCA locations. A significant decrease in anoxic brain damage/nursing home admission was observed among 30-day survivors in public, but not among survivors from residential OHCAs.
Contributors

Mads Wissenberg
Author

Thomas Alexander Gerds
Author

Shahzleen Rajan
Author

Lena Karlsson
Author

Kristian Kragholm
Author

Marianne Pape
Author

Freddy K Lippert
Author

Gunnar H Gislason
Author

Fredrik Folke
Author

Christian Torp-Pedersen
Author

Steen Moller Hansen
Author


