Factors Impacting Patient Outcomes Associated with Use of Emergency Medical Services Operating in Urban Versus Rural Areas: A Systematic Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methodology
2.1. Definition of Rural Versus Urban
2.2. Systematic Review Protocol
2.3. Screening
2.4. Quality Appraisal
3. Results
3.1. Prehospital Time
3.2. Response Time
3.3. On-scene Time
3.4. Transfer Rates
3.5. Transport Time
3.6. Survival Rates
4. Discussion
4.1. Response Time
4.2. On-Scene Time
4.3. Transport Time Interval
4.4. Survival Rates
4.5. Limitations of This Review
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
Ethical Approval
References
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Author & Year | Study Title | Study Design | Setting & Date (When Stated) | Patient Age Demographics | Study Sample | Outcomes of Interest | CASP Grade |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Stripe and Suaman 1991 [30] | A rural-urban comparison of prehospital emergency medical services in Nebraska | Prospective study | The USA. 1988–1989 | Not specified | Patients attending emergency medical services | The rural ambulance provided more services than an urban ambulance. | 5/12 |
Lombardi et al. 1994 [31] | The outcome of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest in New York City. The Pre-Hospital Arrest Survival Evaluation (PHASE) Study | Cohort study | The USA 1990–1991 | 70 (30–79) | 3243 patients with Cardiac arrest | Total survival rate within the study group was 1.4%. | 6/12 |
Grossman et al. 1997 [32] | Urban-rural differences in the prehospital care of major trauma | Prospective cohort study | The USA. 1991–1992 | Not specified | 459 patients with major trauma | Rural patients had a higher risk of death before arrival (relative risk = 7.4, 95% Confidence Interval (CI) 2.4–22.8) if response time was over 30 min. | 8/12 |
Absalom et al. 1998 [10] | Out-of-hospital cardiac arrests in an urban/rural area during 1991 and 1996: Have emergency medical service changes improved outcome? | Retrospective analysis | The UK 1991–1996 | 67 (13)/70 (13) | 113 cases of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest | Restoration of spontaneous circulation before arrival in the Emergency Department (ED) occurred for patients irrespective of location | 8/12 |
Huang et al. 2001 [33] | Ambulance utilization in metropolitan and rural areas in Taiwan | Retrospective study | Taiwan 1997 | Not specified | Patients attending an emergency medical service | Urban areas had higher call volume and non-transport calls. | 5/12 |
Layon et al. 2003 [34] | Utstein style analysis of rural out-of-hospital cardiac arrest [OOHCA]: Total cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) time inversely correlates with hospital discharge rate | Retrospective analysis | The USA 1998 | 65.9 ± 17.4 | 137 patients with cardiac arrest | Asystole as the initial rhythm, and ED CPR time (8 vs. 15.5 min, p = 0.042 for survivors vs. non-survivors) were the only factors affecting the survival rate. | 6/12 |
Svensson et al. 2003 [35] | Safety and delay time in prehospital thrombolysis of acute myocardial infarction in urban and rural areas in Sweden | Prospective observational study | Sweden 1999–2000 | 65 ± 12/69 ± 10 | 154 patients with myocardial infarction | Patients in urban areas got a higher ejection fraction and fewer symptoms of heart failure after 30 days and a lower 1-year mortality | 7/12 |
Vukmir et al. 2004 [36] | The influence of urban, suburban, or rural locale on survival from refractory prehospital cardiac arrest | Prospective, randomised, double— A blind clinical intervention trial | The USA 1992–1996 | >18 years | 874 patients with cardiac arrest | The survival rate was approximately 13.9% in rural, 14% in suburban, and 23% in urban | 9/12 |
McGuffie et al. 2005 [37] | Scottish urban versus rural trauma outcome study. | Prospective observational study | Scotland 1998–2000 | Urban median = 50 years, rural median = 46 years | 4636 traumatic patients | Rural areas had higher transfers than urban areas (p = 0.002). | 7/12 |
Gonzalez et al. 2006 [20] | Increased Mortality in Rural Vehicular Trauma: Identifying Contributing Factors Through Data Linkage | Retrospective analysis | The USA 2001–2003 | Not specified | 6443 patients with crash injuries | Mortality rates were 4.2% and 2.1% in rural and urban respectively (p = 0.0001). | 6/12 |
Herlitz et al. 2006 [38] | Characteristics and outcome of patients with acute chest pain about the use of ambulances in an urban and a rural area | Cross-sectional study | Sweden 1996–1997 | 71 ± 15/59 ± 17 | Patients with acute chest pain | The Mortality rate was 41.8% among those transported by ambulance and 15.8% among those transported by other means. | 7/12 |
Jennings et al. 2006 [19] | Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest in Victoria: Rural and urban outcomes | Retrospective case series | Australia 2002 to 2003 | 68.4 ± 14.4/65.2 ± 13.4 | 1790 patients with bystander-witnessed cardiac arrest | Rural areas had more bystander cardiopulmonary resuscitation than urban areas. Urban patients with bystander-witnessed cardiac arrest were more likely to discharge from hospital alive than rural patients. | 5/12 |
Moore et al. 2008 [39] | The Northern Ireland Public Access Defibrillation (NIPAD) study: Effectiveness in urban and rural populations | Prospective before and after the intervention, population study. | Northern Ireland 2004–2006 | 67.9 (15.1) | Patients with out-of-hospital cardiac arrests | In the urban areas, rates of survival were 5.1% in 2004 and 1.4% from 2005 to 2006. In the rural areas, survival rates were 2.5% in 2004 and 3.5% in 2005–2006. | 8/12 |
Gonzalez et al. 2009 [29] | Does increased emergency medical services prehospital time affect patient mortality in rural motor vehicle crashes? | Retrospective analysis | The USA 2001–2002 | Not specified | 45,763 crashed patients | Rural settings had a higher mortality rate than urban settings. 1.78% in rural settings versus 0.90% in urban settings (p < 0.0001). | 7/12 |
Mihalicz et al. 2010 [40] | Urban vs. rural pediatric trauma in Alberta: Where can we focus on prevention? | Retrospective analysis | USA 1996–2006 | 11 (0–17) | 2660 paediatric patients with major trauma | Urban patients had a higher rate of mortality than rural ones (13.0% vs. 10.5%; p = 0.05). | 8/12 |
Shultis et al. 2010 [41] | Striking Rural-Urban Disparities Observed in Acute Stroke Care Capacity and Services in the Pacific Northwest: Implications and Recommendations | Survey study | USA Spring 2008 | ≥45 years | 426 patients with acute stroke | Rural-urban differences were observed, with rural hospitals have a much lower capacity to care for patients with stroke adequately. | 8/12 |
Fatovich et al. 2011 [42] | A comparison of metropolitan vs. major rural trauma in Western Australia | Retrospective study | Australia 1997–2006 | 40.1 ± 22.6 | 3333 patients with major trauma | Rural patients had higher mortality rates than urban. The adjusted odds ratio for death was 1.10 (95% CI 0.66–1.84, p = 0.708). | 7/12 |
Sørensen et al. 2011 [43] | Urban and rural implementation of pre-hospital diagnosis and direct referral for primary percutaneous coronary intervention in patients with acute ST-elevation myocardial infarction | Prospective analysis | Denmark 2004–2007 | Range = 56 to 79 | 759 patients with myocardial infarctions | Rural areas had an EMS delay of 9 min compared to urban areas, and a median travel distance of 30 km longer. | 6/12 |
Bhuyan et al. 2013 [44] | Rural-urban differences in acute myocardial infarction mortality: Evidence from Nebraska | Retrospective analysis | The USA 2005–2009 and 2011 | 15 to 85+ | Patients with acute myocardial infarction | Urban areas had a lower mortality rate than patients in rural areas. | 8/12 |
Ro et al. 2013 [45] | A trend in epidemiology and outcomes of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest by urbanization level: A nationwide observational study from 2006 to 2010 in South Korea. Resuscitation | nationwide observational study | South Korea. 2006 –2010 | 65 (49–76) | 97291 patients with out-of-hospital cardiac arrest | The survival rate was 3.0% for EMS-assessed Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrests (OHCAs) (3.3% for cardiac aetiology and 2.3% for noncardiac aetiology) and 3.6% for EMS-treated OHCAs. | 8/12 |
Aftyka et al. 2014 [22] | Are there any differences in medical emergency team interventions between rural and urban areas? | Retrospective cohort study | Poland 2009 | Not specified | 1624 patients in emergency medical service | Rural areas used cervical collars more than urban areas. | 9/12 |
Horeczko et al. 2014 [46] | Urban and Rural Patterns in Emergent Pediatric Transfer: A Call for Regionalization | National survey data | The USA 1995–2010. | <18 years | 283,232,058 paediatric emergency department visits | Children transferred from rural Emergency Departments (EDs) were more likely to arrive by emergency medical services than children transferred from urban EDs. | 6/12 |
Lipsky et al. 2014 [47] | A comparison of rural versus urban trauma care | Observational cohort study | The USA 1995–1996 | 32.5 (Inter quartile range (IQR): 21.5 –50.5) | 1122 traumatic patients | Mortality was comparable between urban and rural areas. | 5/12 |
Sidney et al. 2014 [48] | Utilization of a State Run Public Private Emergency Transportation Service Exclusively for Childbirth: The Janani (Maternal) Express Program in Madhya Pradesh, India | Cross-sectional facility-based study | India 2012–2013 | Median = 23 | 1126 women delivering in health facilities | Uptake was more in rural areas 44% and poorly educated women 40% | 7/12 |
Masterson et al. 2015 [49] | Urban and rural differences in out-of-hospital cardiac arrest in Ireland | Retrospective analysis | Ireland 2012 | 67(52–78) | 1798 patients with out-of-hospital cardiac arrests | Urban patients had higher hospital discharge rates than rural patients (6% vs. 3%) | 5/12 |
Nordberg et al. 2015 [50] | The survival benefit of dual dispatch of EMS and fire-fighters in out-of-hospital cardiac arrest may differ depending on population density – A prospective cohort study | Prospective cohort study | Sweden 2004, 2006–2009 | 77/72 | 2513 patients with out-of-hospital cardiac arrest | 30-day survival was higher in urban patients than the rural patients. | 7/12 |
Raatiniemi et al. 2015 [51] | Short-term outcome and differences between rural and urban trauma patients treated by mobile intensive care units in Northern Finland: A retrospective analysis | Retrospective analysis | Finland 2012–2013 | 33 (20–55) | 472 traumatic patients | Mortality within 30-day was 23.9% in urban and 13.3% in rural. | 8/12 |
Newgard et al. 2016 [21] | Evaluation of Rural vs. Urban Trauma Patients Served by 9-1-1 Emergency Medical Services. | Secondary analysis of a prospective cohort study | The USA 2011 | 51.6 ± 26.1 | 53,487 traumatic patients | Mortality was 23.9% in urban and 13.3% in rural, however, in the first 24 h 89.6% of rural deaths occurred compared with 64% of urban deaths. | 6/12 |
Beck et al. 2017 [52] | Resuscitation attempts and duration in the traumatic out-of-hospital cardiac arrest | Retrospective analysis | Australia 2008–2014 | Median = 44 years (IQR: 28–60) | 2334 patients with traumatic out-of-hospital cardiac arrest | Arrests occurring in urban regions had significantly higher odds of attempted resuscitation relative to those in rural regions | 8/12 |
Mathiesen et al. 2018 [53] | Effects of modifiable prehospital factors on survival after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest in rural versus urban areas | Prospective analysis | Norway. 2006–2014 | Urban = 70 (58–81), rural = 69 (56–80) | 1138 patients with out-of-hospital cardiac arrest | Urban patients had higher survival rates than urban patients. | 9/12 |
Park et al. 2018 [54] | Dispatcher-assisted bystander cardiopulmonary resuscitation in rural and urban areas and survival outcomes after the out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. | Cross-sectional study | South Korea 2012–2015 | 71 (57–79) | 53,240 patients with out-of-hospital cardiac arrests | Urban patients had higher neurological recovery than rural patients. 1.6% and 6.8% in rural and urban areas, respectively. | 9/12 |
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Alanazy, A.R.M.; Wark, S.; Fraser, J.; Nagle, A. Factors Impacting Patient Outcomes Associated with Use of Emergency Medical Services Operating in Urban Versus Rural Areas: A Systematic Review. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2019, 16, 1728. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16101728
Alanazy ARM, Wark S, Fraser J, Nagle A. Factors Impacting Patient Outcomes Associated with Use of Emergency Medical Services Operating in Urban Versus Rural Areas: A Systematic Review. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2019; 16(10):1728. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16101728
Chicago/Turabian StyleAlanazy, Ahmed Ramdan M., Stuart Wark, John Fraser, and Amanda Nagle. 2019. "Factors Impacting Patient Outcomes Associated with Use of Emergency Medical Services Operating in Urban Versus Rural Areas: A Systematic Review" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 16, no. 10: 1728. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16101728
APA StyleAlanazy, A. R. M., Wark, S., Fraser, J., & Nagle, A. (2019). Factors Impacting Patient Outcomes Associated with Use of Emergency Medical Services Operating in Urban Versus Rural Areas: A Systematic Review. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 16(10), 1728. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16101728