Abstract

BackgroundPeople who die from heart disease at home before any attempt at transport has been made may represent missed opportunities for life-saving medical intervention. In this study, we undertook a point-pattern spatial analysis of heart disease deaths occurring before transport in a large metropolitan area to determine whether there was spatial clustering of non-transported decedents and whether there were significant differences between the clusters of non-transported cardiac decedents and the clusters of transported cardiac decedents in terms of average travel distances to nearest hospital and area socioeconomic characteristics. These analyses were adjusted for individual predictors of transport status.MethodsWe obtained transport status from the place of death variable on the death certificate. We geocoded heart disease decedents to residential street addresses using a rigorous, multistep process with 97% success. Our final study population consisted of 11,485 adults aged 25-74 years who resided in a large metropolitan area in west-central Florida and died from heart disease during 1998-2002. We conducted a kernel density analysis to identify clusters of the residential locations of cardiac decedents where there was a statistically significant excess probability of being either transported or not transported prior to death; we controlled for individual-level covariates using logistic regression-derived probability estimates.ResultsThe majority of heart disease decedents were married (53.4%), male (66.4%), white (85.6%), and aged 65-74 years at the time of death (54.7%), and a slight majority were transported prior to death (57.7%). After adjustment for individual predictors, 21 geographic clusters of non-transported heart disease decedents were observed. Contrary to our hypothesis, clusters of non-transported decedents were slightly closer to hospitals than clusters of transported decedents. The social environmental characteristics of clusters varied in the expected direction, with lower socioeconomic and household resources in the clusters of non-transported heart disease deaths.ConclusionsThese results suggest that in this large metropolitan area unfavorable household and neighborhood resources played a larger role than distance to hospital with regard to transport status of cardiac patients; more research is needed in different geographic areas of the United States and in other industrialized nations.

Highlights

  • People who die from heart disease at home before any attempt at transport has been made may represent missed opportunities for life-saving medical intervention

  • In the event of a heart attack or other acute cardiac event, people with heart disease have very good chances of survival if they are rapidly transported to a hospital and receive medical care that includes interventions according to guidelines [6]

  • Our study population consisted of adults aged 25-74 years old who were residents of the Tampa Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA), and who died from heart disease during 19982002

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Summary

Introduction

People who die from heart disease at home before any attempt at transport has been made may represent missed opportunities for life-saving medical intervention. We undertook a point-pattern spatial analysis of heart disease deaths occurring before transport in a large metropolitan area to determine whether there was spatial clustering of non-transported decedents and whether there were significant differences between the clusters of non-transported cardiac decedents and the clusters of transported cardiac decedents in terms of average travel distances to nearest hospital and area socioeconomic characteristics These analyses were adjusted for individual predictors of transport status. Previous research has suggested that both individual-level (e.g., being unmarried) [8,9] and area-level (e.g., living in the Western region of the U.S.) [8] characteristics may be important in determining whether someone receives transport prior to death These earlier studies examined relatively large geographic units and did not examine point patterns of mortality from heart disease

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