Emergency procedural pathway combined with graded zoning management is associated with improved in-hospital survival and quality of life in patients with acute myocardial infarction - Scorecard - MDSpire
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Emergency procedural pathway combined with graded zoning management is associated with improved in-hospital survival and quality of life in patients with acute myocardial infarction
Clinical Scorecard: Integration of Emergency Procedural Pathways with Graded Zoning Management Enhances In-Hospital Survival and Quality of Life for Acute Myocardial Infarction Patients
At a Glance
Category
Detail
Condition
Acute Myocardial Infarction
Key Mechanisms
Emergency procedural pathways combined with graded zoning management.
Target Population
Patients with Acute Myocardial Infarction (AMI)
Care Setting
Emergency Department
Key Highlights
In-hospital survival was higher in the intervention group (96.8%) compared to the control group (81.3%).
First-aid time was significantly shorter in the intervention group (67.30 min vs. 75.70 min).
Hospital stay was reduced in the intervention group (14.62 days vs. 18.08 days).
Quality-of-life scores improved across all domains in the intervention group.
Patient satisfaction was higher in the intervention group (87.1% vs. 65.6%).
Guideline-Based Recommendations
Diagnosis
Rapid assessment of patient information and vital signs is essential.
Management
Implement structured pathways to minimize door-to-reperfusion time.
Monitoring & Follow-up
Monitor quality-of-life and satisfaction scores post-intervention.
Risks
Consider potential confounding factors such as AMI severity and reperfusion eligibility.
Patient & Prescribing Data
126 patients with AMI enrolled in a quasi-experimental study.
Emergency procedural pathways combined with graded zoning management improved outcomes.
Clinical Best Practices
Utilize organized systems of care to optimize emergency workflows.
Focus on time-sensitive emergency care to improve survival rates.