Abstract

Sudden cardiac arrest (SCA) is one of the leading causes of death in adults around the world. And in some patients, SCA is followed by a return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) and remain unresponsive. International guidelines recommend therapeutic hypothermia within 4 hours of ROSC for patients' survival. A medium-sized tertiary teaching hospital in the Midwestern United States was not achieving the recommendations of therapeutic hypothermia therapy. A root cause analysis identified multiple factors contributed to therapy delay. In March 2019, this hospital embarked on a 6-month trial of an intravascular targeted temperature management (ITTM) system to meet the recommendations. Donabedian's model guided the trial and included patients who suffered an SCA, with ROSC and remained unresponsive. Descriptive analysis was completed to compare the patients before and after the trial. The trial included interprofessional education of the ITTM system, policies, orders, and new process for initiating the therapy. A total of nine patients were included in the trial and with an average time to target temperature was 3.28 hours compared with 8.81 hours before the trial. The trial demonstrated ITTM was successful in meeting the recommendations. Paired with the promising research on the system's effectiveness, we have demonstrated that intravascular cooling can be implemented to reach the international recommendations. These reductions in treatment delays may prompt improved outcomes for individuals in the post-SCA population.

Full Text
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