Smartphone-activated volunteer responders and bystander defibrillation for out-of-hospital cardiac arrest in private homes and public locations
European Heart Journal - Acute CardioVascular Care

Abstract
To investigate the association between the arrival of smartphone-activated volunteer responders before the Emergency Medical Services (EMS) and bystander defibrillation in out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) at home and public locations.
This is a retrospective study (1 September 2017–14 May 2019) from the Stockholm Region of Sweden and the Capital Region of Denmark. We included 1271 OHCAs, of which 1029 (81.0%) occurred in private homes and 242 (19.0%) in public locations. The main outcome was bystander defibrillation. At least one volunteer responder arrived before EMS in 381 (37.0%) of OHCAs at home and 84 (34.7%) in public. More patients received bystander defibrillation when a volunteer responder arrived before EMS at home (15.5 vs. 2.2%,
Bystander defibrillation was significantly more common in private homes and public locations when a volunteer responder arrived before the EMS. The standardized probability of bystander defibrillation increased with longer EMS response times in private homes. Our findings support the activation of volunteer responders and suggest that volunteer responders could increase bystander defibrillation, particularly in private homes.
Contributors

Mads Chr Tofte Gregers
Author

Ellinor Berglund
Author

Gunnar H Gislason
Author

Jacob Hollenberg
Author

Mattias Ringh
Author

Carolina Malta Hansen
Author

Fredrik Folke
Author

Martin Jonsson
Author

Thomas A Gerds
Author

Shahzleen Rajan
Author

Christian Torp-Pedersen
Author

Andreas Claesson
Author

Freddy Lippert
Author


