
Originally Posted by
bae
Note that the actual situation, for out-of-hospital events, is considerably more nuanced than the numbers in that report.
As I mentioned above, my remote community has the highest survival rate in the country for those sorts of events. But not because we are lucky.
We have:
- a large portion of the civilian population trained well in CPR, and how to do team-CPR
- our fire/rescue/ems services here are world-leading in delivering high-performance CPR, to the point where we are often used as the testing ground for new protocols
- our 911-dispatch system is trained and practiced at delivering "CPR over the phone" - teaching a civilian over the phone how to do good CPR in real-time once they've called 911
- we have an incredible density of AEDs in the community
- we have a well-oiled system to air-evac patients to a higher level of care once they are stabilized enough to be flown. We can often get you to definite care *faster* if you drop on the street here, than if you did so in downtown Seattle.
It would be useful for you perhaps to investigate how your own community deals with these situations.