P1751LATIN - A template for effective AMI management in developing countries

Autor: Andrea Abizaid, Marco Antonio Perin, R Botelho, Jamil Cade, Fausto Feres, C Matheus, M A Torres, F Fernandez, D Vieira, C Dusilek, J Mazzini, M Ceschim, Sameer Mehta, M Prudente, R Calvanti
Rok vydání: 2019
Předmět:
Zdroj: European Heart Journal. 40
ISSN: 1522-9645
0195-668X
DOI: 10.1093/eurheartj/ehz748.0505
Popis: Background In resource-constrained nations, population-based AMI coverage is daunting. Telemedicine can transform the situation through an efficient, cost-effective and scalable program called the Latin America Telemedicine Infarct Network (LATIN). We present our innovative hub-spoke strategy, that has served >780,000 patients. Purpose To use telemedicine protocols to demonstrate appropriate access to quality AMI care, encompassing remote areas. Methods LATIN required technology and process metrics optimization as well as a scrupulous site selection, during a 12-month pilot. Spokes represent our strategy's nucleus; they consist of small, rural clinics and resource-limited facilities that are connected to PCI-capable hubs. Spokes require constant (3-T) training: Triage, Telemedicine, and Transportation. The latter two categories are the most challenging because they demand constant upgrading. Results 784,395 patients were screened at 350 LATIN centers (Brazil 143, Colombia 118, Mexico 82, Argentina 7). A total of 8,440 (1.08%) patients were diagnosed with AMI; 3,924 (46.5%) were urgently reperfused including 3,048 (77.7%) who underwent PCI. Globally, Time to Telemedicine Diagnosis (TTD) was 3 min exhibiting 98.9% tele-accuracy, D2B was 51 min, additionally, in-hospital mortality was 5.2%. Major reasons for non-treatment of patients were insurance, lack of ICU beds and delayed presentation. Conclusions LATIN is a valuable healthcare system prototype for developing countries. Our hub-spoke strategy focuses on providing adequate AMI management for populations. However, aspects such as ambulance availability, insurance denial and lack of ICU beds must be targeted to improve performance.
Databáze: OpenAIRE