Friday 20 September 2013

A Five Point Cardiac Arrest Prevention Strategy for Canadian Schools



Here is an excerpt from an article written on research presented by Dr. Andrew Krahn at the 2012 Canadian Cardiovascular Congress.
“Our research gives us an idea of the scope of the problem – there are almost 200 young people who die suddenly every year in Ontario. A good proportion of them have unrecognized heart disease. So the question is: How can we catch this before it happens,” says Krahn.

He suggests that more attention be paid to possible warning signs such as fainting. He believes that teachers, coaches and an aware public may be key to detecting risk, ensuring prevention and formal medical evaluation and therapy.

“I would advocate for careful screening of people who faint, using questionnaires and education of healthcare professionals so that when warning signs present themselves, they recognize them and this information gets passed on to the right people,” he says.

http://news.bioscholar.com/2012/10/hidden-disease-sports-sudden-cardiac-arrest.html

With virtually no hard cost every School Board could implement Dr. Krahn’s recommendations for preventing sudden death in children. The five key elements of a Cardiac Arrest Prevention Strategy are: 

A 20 Minute Arrhythmia Awareness Training Program that provides some background on Inherited Heart Rhythm Disorders (IHRD) and explains the warning signs and how to respond appropriately to those warnings. It should be available on-line to all staff and families but should be mandatory for all staff taking AED/CPR certification training and for all Physical Education Teachers and Coaches

A Pre-Participation Screening Questionnaire that would be completed by all parents/guardians at the time of enrolment at a new school. When there are positive answers in both the patient history and family history sections of the questionnaire the family should consult a physician immediately.
http://leadingcause.blogspot.ca/2013/05/inherited-heart-rhythm-disorder-pre.html

Mandatory 9-1-1 Calling  for Loss-of-Consciousness Fainting (syncope) It may be mandatory 9-1-1 for all syncope or at the very least mandatory 9-1-1 for all syncope occurring during or shortly after physical activity. In most communities ambulance are equipped with ECG monitoring equipment and paramedics are trained in heart rhythm recognition. Our tax dollars paid for this equipment and training it only makes sense to use it. 

Mandatory Notification of Parents/Guardians of all Syncope including providing them with information about IHRD’s. Parent's must be informed on the day of the event and must be provided with information that will help them understand the significance of fainting and other warning signs and the importance of physician follow-up. 

Mandatory Medical Clearance for Return to Play Post Syncope Perhaps the most tragic teen deaths are those where there is one or more fainting episodes in the weeks or months prior and the child is allowed to continue to participate in physical activity and dies because of it.

Pennsylvania has passed a law that includes several of these elements. Many other states including Maryland, Ohio and Indiana have pending Sudden Cardiac Arrest Prevention Legislation. Ontario allowed a bill to die on the order paper and it has yet to be revived despite having unanimous support at first and second reading.

If provincial or state legislation is not pending in your jurisdiction go ahead and implement these policies and best practices in your School Board. Work together with local paediatric cardiologists/electrophysiologists to develop the messaging around warning signs. Work with local EMS and ER Physicians to develop policies and practices around 9-1-1 calling for syncope. Trust that mandatory 9-1-1 calling for syncope (especially a child's first faint) occurring on school property will not create an avalanche of unnecessary "nuisance" calls, it won't. Remember that Automated External Defibrillators don't always work, it is better to prevent cardiac arrest than to try and reverse it with an AED.

One in twenty paediatric faints are sinister (the good news is that 19 in 20 are benign) but that number goes up if physical activity was the obvious trigger.  From a risk management standpoint it makes sense to be proactive on fainting and for the well being of our children it is imperative that all fainting be investigated.

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