Abstract

Each year, about 1,250,000 people in the United States experience an acute myocardial infarction (AMI). Emergency medical services (EMS) systems play a key part in the prehospital care and transportation of AMI patients. Rapid, state-of-the-art treatment by EMS personnel is essential for improving AMI survival and outcomes, as dramatized by the patient who is the victim of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. In order to improve the prehospital care provided to AMI patients, this article by the Access to Care Subcommittee of the National Heart Attack Alert Program Coordinating Committee makes a number of recommendations regarding the staffing and equipping of EMS systems. The recommendations cover the “chain of survival” concept, universal and enhanced 9-1-1, emergency medical dispatching, ground ambulance specifications, automated external defibrillators, advanced life support coverage, medical direction, 12-lead electrocardiograms, and prehospital thrombolysis.

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