This overly optimistic view, which may partly stem from seeing happy
outcomes in television medical dramas, can get in the way of
decision-making and frank conversations about end of life care with
doctors, the research team writes in American Journal of Emergency
Medicine.
CPR is intended to restart a heart that has stopped beating, known
as cardiac arrest, which is typically caused by an electrical
disturbance in the heart muscle. Although a heart attack is not the
same thing – it occurs when blood flow to the heart is partly or
completely blocked, often by a clot – a heart attack can also cause
the heart to stop beating.
Whatever the cause of cardiac arrest, restarting the heart as
quickly as possible to get blood flowing to the brain is essential
to preventing permanent brain damage. More often than not, cardiac
arrest ends in death or severe neurological impairment.
The overall rate of survival that leads to hospital discharge for
someone who experiences cardiac arrest is about 10.6 percent, the
study authors note. But most participants in the study estimated it
at more than 75 percent.
“The majority of patients and non-medical personnel have very
unrealistic expectations about the success of CPR as well as the
quality of life after patients are revived,” said lead author
Lindsey Ouellette, a research assistant at Michigan State
University’s College of Human Medicine in Grand Rapids.
Patients and family members should know about the realistic success
rate and survival numbers when planning a living will and
considering a “Do Not Resuscitate” order, Ouellette said.
“We think it is best to have the latest and most accurate
information when dealing with this life-impacting decision, whether
or not to undertake or continue CPR,” she told Reuters Health in an
email.
To gauge perceptions of CPR, the researchers surveyed 1,000 adults
at four academic medical centers in Michigan, Illinois and
California. Participants included non-critically ill patients and
families of patients, who were interviewed during random hospital
shifts.
In addition to asking about general knowledge of CPR and personal
experiences with CPR, the researchers presented participants with
several scenarios and asked them to estimate the likelihood of CPR
success and patient survival in each case.
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One scenario involved a 54-year-old who suffered a heart attack at
home and required CPR by paramedics. About 72 percent of the survey
participants predicted survival and 65 percent predicted a complete
neurological recovery.
In a scenario describing a trauma-related cardiac arrest in an
8-year-old, 71 percent predicted CPR success and 64 percent
predicted long-term survival of the child.
“Many people felt if a person was successfully revived, they would
return to ‘normal’ rather than possibly needing lifelong care,”
Ouellette said.
At the same time, more than 70 percent of respondents said they
watched TV medical dramas regularly, and 12 percent said these shows
were a reliable source of health information.
“Tempering unrealistic expectations may not make for ‘good TV,’ but
perhaps we can get a better idea of just how these dramas may impact
the views people hold about CPR and other aspects of medicine,” she
said.
“People think about CPR as a miracle, but it’s another medical act,”
said Dr. Juan Ruiz-Garcia of Hospital Universitario de Torrejon in
Madrid who wasn’t involved in the study. “I’m not really sure what
people would choose if they knew the real prognosis of it,” he told
Reuters Health by phone.
CPR should be part of the conversation about end-of-life care and
advanced directives among families, said Carolyn Bradley of Yale-New
Haven Hospital in Connecticut.
“When doing CPR at a hospital, we tend to move the family away, but
we’ve created a situation where families may not be there for the
final moments,” she said in a phone interview.
“Have a critical conversation with your health care provider and go
with questions about what would happen during CPR,” she said. “What
does it look like? What happens to my body? Who will be around? It
could be the end-of-life. Statistically, it is.”
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2Chqt7N American Journal of Emergency
Medicine, online February 3, 2018.
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