Women delayed seeking medical care longer than men, with a median delay to first medical contact of 90 minutes compared to 66 minutes for men (p=0.04).
Cross-Sectional
Yes
Do women with STEMI experience longer prehospital delays and different first medical contacts compared to men?
449 patients (340 men, 109 women) aged between 31 and 95 years with confirmed ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) admitted to 5 Swedish hospitals with 24/7 catheterisation facilities.
First medical contact (FMC) type and prehospital delay times (time from symptom onset to FMC and time from symptom onset to diagnostic ECG)patient reported
Women with STEMI experience significantly longer prehospital delays than men, partly due to atypical symptoms and longer decision times, highlighting the need for improved public awareness.
Objectives Compare gender disparities in ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) regarding first medical contact (FMC) and prehospital delay times and explore factors associated with prehospital delay in men and women separately. Design Cross-sectional study based on medical records and a validated questionnaire. Eligible patients were enrolled within 24 hours after admittance to hospital. Setting Patients were included from November 2012 to January 2014 from five Swedish hospitals with catheterisation facilities 24/7. Participants 340 men and 109 women aged between 31 and 95 years completed the survey. Main outcome measures FMC were divided into five possible contacts: primary healthcare centre by phone or directly, national advisory nurse by phone, emergency medical services (EMS) and emergency room directly. Two parts of prehospital delay times were studied: time from symptom onset to FMC and time from symptom onset to diagnostic ECG. Results Women more often called an advisory nurse as FMC (28% vs 18%, p=0.02). They had a longer delay until FMC, 90 (IQR 39–221) vs 66 (28–161) min, p=0.04 and until ECG, 146 (68–316) vs 103 (61–221) min, p=0.03. Men went to hospital because of believing they were stricken by an MI to a higher extent than women did (25% vs 15%, p=0.04) and were more often recommended to call EMS by bystanders (38% vs 22%, p<0.01). Hesitating about going to hospital and experiencing pain in the stomach/back/shoulders were factors associated with longer delays in women. Believing the symptoms would disappear or interpreting them as nothing serious were corresponding factors in men. In both genders bystanders acting by contacting EMS explained shorter prehospital delays. Conclusions In STEMI, women differed from men in FMC and they had longer delays. This was partly due to atypical symptoms and a longer decision time. Bystanders acted more promptly when men than when women fell ill. Public knowledge of MI symptoms, and how to act properly, still seems insufficient.
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Sofia Sederholm Lawesson
Rose‐Marie Isaksson
Maria Ericsson
BMJ Open
Umeå University
Linköping University
Västerbotten County
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Lawesson et al. (Tue,) conducted a cross-sectional in ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) (n=449). Women delayed seeking medical care longer than men, with a median delay to first medical contact of 90 minutes compared to 66 minutes for men (p=0.04).
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69813047229fc2169ebc21ec — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2017-020211
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