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) rather than for pilot or efficacy studies. A systematic review of the literature combined with qualitative interviews among cardiac arrest survivors was used to generate a list of potential outcome domains. This list was prioritized through a Delphi process, which involved clinicians, patients, and their relatives/partners. An international advisory panel narrowed these down to 3 core domains by debate that led to consensus. The writing group refined recommendations for when these outcomes should be measured and further characterized relevant measurement tools. Consensus emerged that a core outcome set for reporting on effectiveness studies of cardiac arrest (COSCA) in adults should include survival, neurological function, and health-related quality of life. This should be reported as survival status and modified Rankin scale score at hospital discharge, at 30 days, or both. Health-related quality of life should be measured with ≥1 tools from Health Utilities Index version 3, Short-Form 36-Item Health Survey, and EuroQol 5D-5L at 90 days and at periodic intervals up to 1 year after cardiac arrest, if resources allow.
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Haywood et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a01f46dbd6301933f5cd66a — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1161/cir.0000000000000562
Kirstie Haywood
Department of Health and Social Care
Laura Whitehead
University of Sheffield
Vinay Nadkarni
Boston University
Circulation
Työväentutkimus Vuosikirja
Williams (United States)
Marcus (United States)
Barry Callebaut (Belgium)
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