A community intervention by firefighters to increase 911 calls and aspirin use for chest pain.

Category Primary study
JournalAcademic emergency medicine : official journal of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine
Year 2006
OBJECTIVES: To test the effectiveness of an intervention, delivered face-to-face by local firefighters, designed to increase utilization of 911 and self-administration of aspirin for seniors experiencing chest pain. METHODS: King County, Washington was divided into 126 geographically distinct areas that were randomized to intervention and control areas. A mailing list identified households of seniors within these areas. More than 20,000 homes in the intervention areas were contacted by local firefighters. Data on all 911 calls for chest pain and self-administration of aspirin were collected from the medical incident report form (MIRF). The unit of analysis was the area. Firefighters delivered a heart attack survival kit (that included an aspirin) and counseled participants on the importance of aspirin and 911 use for chest pain. Main outcome measures were 911 calls for chest pain and aspirin ingestion for a chest pain event, obtained from the MIRFs that are collected by emergency medical services personnel for 2 years after the intervention. RESULTS: There were significantly more calls (16%) among seniors on the mailing list in the intervention than control areas in the first year after the intervention. Among the seniors who were not on the mailing list, there was little difference in the intervention and control areas. The results were somewhat sensitive to the analytical model used and to an outlier in the treatment group. CONCLUSIONS: A community-based firefighter intervention can be effective in increasing appropriate response to symptoms of a heart attack among elders.
Epistemonikos ID: 2e53a6235ec44e0b54232e70c6ba48501f262e42
First added on: May 12, 2022