Treatment of acute myocardial infarction in the sub-arctic region of Norway. Do we offer an equal quality of care?
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/11845Dato
2017-10-26Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Norum, Jan; Hovland, Anders; Balteskard, Lise; Trovik, Thor; Haug, Bjørn; Hansen, Finn Henry; Alterskjær, Sissel; Madsen, Pål; Olsen, FrankSammendrag
Patients, relatives, healthcare workers and administrators are concerned about the quality of care
offered. We aimed to explore the treatment of acute myocatrdial infarction (AMI) in Northern
Norway, compare it with the national figures, and document whether there is an equal quality of
care or not. The retrospective study included data on patients' treatment for AMI. The following
sources were employed. The Norwegian Patient Registry, National Quality of Care Database,
Norwegian Myocardial Infarction Registry and data from the National Air Ambulance Services
of Norway. The period 2012-2014/15 was studied and the variables were: incidence of AMI,
gender and age adjusted rates of AMI and revascularization (PCI, CABG) based on patient's
place of living (according to hospital catchment area) and 30-day survival rate. The annual
incidence of AMI was 9% higher in the northern region. Significant incidence variations (2.7
–
5.9
AMI/1000 inhabitants) between the hospitals' catchment areas were revealed. The 30-day survival
rate varied between 85.1
–
92.1% between hospitals. The variation in revascularization/AMI rate
was 0.72
–
1.54. Air amublance services' availability varied through the day. In conclusion, significant variations in the AMI rate and an unequal service within the region was revealed.