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Doctors urge: Don鈥檛 drive during a heart attack or stroke鈥擟all 911

Experts warn that driving someone to the hospital during a medical emergency can cost critical time

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By Michael Merschel
American Heart Association News

You鈥檙e having chest pain, or you fear that your spouse is having a stroke 鈥 and you鈥檙e thinking of just driving to a hospital instead of calling 911.

What do emergency department doctors think of that plan?

鈥淚 think it would be an extraordinarily rare situation where that鈥檚 a good idea,鈥 said Dr. Eric Isaacs, director of the age-friendly emergency department at Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital.

Here鈥檚 why: He鈥檚 often seen people show up at the hospital, pounding on the door, with somebody in their front seat, not breathing and with no pulse, because they mistakenly thought it would be better to drive them, said Isaacs, who also is a clinical professor of emergency medicine at the University of California, San Francisco.

Dr. Ameera Haamid, the associate emergency medical services medical director of the Chicago South EMS System, agreed that people should always call 911 when they鈥檙e having heart attack or stroke symptoms.

For a heart attack, those symptoms include shortness of breath; pressure, squeezing, fullness or pain in the chest; pain in the arms, back, neck, jaw or stomach; and other signs such as nausea, a cold sweat or a rapid or irregular heartbeat. Stroke warning signs include face drooping, arm weakness, difficulty speaking or walking, confusion and severe headache. The American Heart Association recommends calling 911 if any of these symptoms develop, or if a person experiences a sudden loss of responsiveness or can鈥檛 breathe normally, which are signs of cardiac arrest.

Haamid, who also is an assistant professor of emergency medicine at University of Chicago Medicine, said she also has seen families arrive at the hospital with someone whose heart stopped beating on the drive there. 鈥淎nd now we鈥檙e doing CPR because they鈥檙e in cardiac arrest.鈥

So, the emergency specialists鈥 advice is clear: Call 911. But for those who still might hesitate, here are some of the reasons why doctors think that way.

Connect with care more quickly

It might seem faster to get somebody with relatively mild symptoms to the hospital yourself, Isaacs said. But that doesn鈥檛 account for the things that can go wrong on the way there. Mild symptoms can quickly worsen. A heart can start beating irregularly or stop; people can lose consciousness and loved ones may not even notice because of agonal breathing, which are reflex breaths that occur when a person is in cardiac arrest.

If you put someone in a car yourself, thinking the hospital is only 15 minutes away, that鈥檚 15 minutes without breathing, or 15 minutes without a pulse, Isaacs said. 鈥淭hat means that they鈥檙e going to be dead when you arrive.鈥

An ambulance crew is trained to handle such problems and recognize when a person鈥檚 condition suddenly changes. They can administer medications, perform CPR or shock a heart back into a correct rhythm if necessary. Powell said the ambulance, in some ways, brings the hospital to your home, and a well-trained paramedic can do nearly all the things a hospital will do for you in cardiac arrest.

It puts you at the front of the line

When you call 911, the hospital can be ready to evaluate you immediately on arrival, Powell said.

Calling 911 speeds things in other ways, too.

鈥淓ven if you live a block away from the hospital, you still need to find a place to park,鈥 Isaacs said. 鈥淵ou then have to walk from the parking area to the hospital for the emergency department.鈥 There might be a line to check in, and you might have to wait before a nurse can evaluate you.

鈥淭ime is ticking,鈥 Isaacs said.

Haamid spelled out why that matters. 鈥淏oth a heart attack and a stroke are time-sensitive diagnoses,鈥 she said. During a heart attack, blood flow is blocked to the heart muscle. In the most common type of stroke, blood flow is blocked to part of the brain.

The longer there is little or no blood flow to the tissue, the greater the likelihood of irreversible damage to the heart or the brain. 鈥淭hat can result in permanent deficits like paralysis, not being able to speak again, or symptoms that are so severe that they can be fatal,鈥 she said.

It gets you to the best care

Emergency medical responders are experts in knowing where the best care happens, Haamid said, and this can be a matter of life or death.

Understanding their role in selecting a hospital is especially important in rural areas, said Dr. Stephen Powell, an assistant professor of emergency medicine at Wake Forest School of Medicine in Winston-Salem, North Carolina.

Someone who lives far from a large city might be tempted to deliver themselves to the nearest clinic, he said. But that is not always the best choice.

鈥淵ou might think, 鈥極h, I live 5 minutes from this hospital. That鈥檚 where I need to go if I鈥檓 having a stroke,鈥欌 said Powell, who also serves as medical director for a rural North Carolina county. But your local hospital might not be able to provide the advanced treatments you need, depending on your type of stroke.

Powell said an EMS team can assess you and say, 鈥溾榃hoa! Your symptoms are the symptoms of a large brain vessel that鈥檚 occluded! You actually need to bypass the hospital that鈥檚 in town and go 30 miles to the right hospital.鈥 And then, boom, you get the intervention you need as quickly as possible, as opposed to a delay.鈥 Local hospitals and larger, tertiary referral hospitals often have agreements in place to make sure 鈥渢he community gets the right care at the right place,鈥 he said.

People in extremely remote areas, Powell said, should be aware of what resources are available ahead of time. 鈥淚 do think common sense plays a role鈥 in any emergency, he said, referring to making the decision of when and when not to call an ambulance. EMS is facing a nationwide crisis in staffing, and this can affect response times. 鈥淚f you feel that based on where you live and how remote this is that it鈥檚 better to drive to the hospital, then that might be the right call for the minority of people in those situations.鈥

But even as a physician, Powell said he鈥檇 call 911 to help a loved one he suspected was having a heart attack. 鈥淚 would much rather my wife be transported by a fully stocked ambulance with a trained EMS team than transported with just me who is simultaneously driving and emotionally compromised.鈥

Faster diagnosis and treatment

Calling 911 doesn鈥檛 just summon an ambulance, Haamid said. It sets hospital staff in motion, so the right specialists are standing by when you arrive. 鈥淚f you arrived with a heart attack in the middle of the night, we would actually call people at home to quickly drive into the hospital to treat you,鈥 she said.

In the ambulance, emergency specialists can begin to evaluate you and even transmit electrocardiogram readings for a doctor to analyze. If you are indeed having a heart attack, the catheterization lab can be on standby, ready to perform procedures that restore blood flow to your heart. If they suspect a stroke, you can be taken straight for a scan to determine what kind and whether clot-busting medication can be given.

Nobody will judge you if you鈥檙e wrong

鈥淚f you鈥檙e worried,鈥 Powell said, 鈥渢hat鈥檚 what the hospital is for 鈥 to make sure that you鈥檙e OK.鈥

Haamid agreed. 鈥淭here鈥檚 no such thing as being embarrassed about any symptom you present with in the emergency department,鈥 she said.

And yet, people often ignore symptoms. Haamid said she sees it every day. People say, 鈥淚 think I had a stroke, maybe two or three days ago,鈥 but they sat at home with the symptoms, she said. At that point, they鈥檝e missed out on time-sensitive treatments that could have helped them.

Powell said he has seen the same with people who had a transient ischemic attack, commonly referred to as a 鈥渕ini-stroke,鈥 but dismissed it as a fluke, when it was a harbinger of a full-blown stroke yet to come.

鈥淚t鈥檚 better to be cautious, and it鈥檚 better to be evaluated,鈥 he said.

Isaacs said he understands the pressures people face when making the decision to call 911. Some of them may be practical, such as concerns about the cost. 鈥淏ut of course, I would err on the side of caution, because that鈥檚 what I do.鈥

Emergency department staff, he said, go into work each day knowing that many of the patients with chest pain aren鈥檛 having a heart attack and will be sent home. 鈥淎nd not to be dramatic, but I will be dramatic: I would rather send you home reassured that it鈥檚 not something serious than having you be dead or disabled.鈥

Instead, Isaacs said, 鈥淚 would rather educate you and reassure you in that situation. And that鈥檚 what we do for most people.鈥

covers heart and brain health. Not all views expressed in this story reflect the official position of the American Heart Association. Copyright is owned or held by the American Heart Association, Inc., and all rights are reserved.

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