Mode of admission and its effect on adherence to reperfusion therapy guidelines in Belgian STEMI patients
European Heart Journal - Acute CardioVascular Care

Abstract
Emergency medical services play a key role in the recognition and treatment of ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI). This study evaluates the effect of emergency medical services use on adherence to reperfusion therapy guidelines in Belgian STEMI patients and on in-hospital mortality.
The mode of admission with against without emergency medical services was associated with baseline risk profile, reperfusion modalities and in-hospital mortality in 5692 consecutive STEMI patients from 2012 to 2014.
A total of 3896 STEMI patients (68%) were transported to the hospital by emergency medical services, and 1796 patients (32%) arrived at the hospital using their own transport (self-referral). Emergency medical services patients were older than self-referral patients (64 vs. 62 years) and more frequently presented with cardiac arrest (14% vs. 5%) and with cardiogenic shock (10% vs. 4%). Emergency medical services patients received primary percutaneous coronary intervention more often (95% vs. 91%,
Emergency medical services are used by two-thirds of Belgian STEMI patients and are associated with a better adherence to STEMI reperfusion guidelines. These data favour the use of emergency medical services as the preferred transfer system for patients with chest pain suspicious for STEMI.
Contributors

Pascal Vranckx
Author

Sofie Gevaert
Author

Patrick Coussement
Author

Ahmed S E Ramadan
Author

Christophe Beauloye
Author

Marc Renard
Author

Patrick Evrard
Author

Jean-François Argacha
Author

Herbert De Raedt
Author

Kristien Wouters
Author

Céline Rousseaux
Author

Pierre Mols
Author

Peter R Sinnaeve
Author

Carl Convens
Author

Philippe Dubois
Author


