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NEWS AND EVENTS

Pioneering Heart Attack Program (STEMI) Is Now Ontario's First Health District-wide Emergency Protocol - Update

Heart Institute Protocol Ensures Standardized Life-Saving Care Available within 200-km Radius

OTTAWA - Sept. 17, 2009 - Heart attack victims who live outside Ottawa's urban centre now are part of the University of Ottawa Heart Institute's (UOHI) far-reaching emergency life-saving program, ensuring urgent standardized treatment regardless of geography and, for the first time in Ontario, throughout an entire regional health district.

Heart Institute specialists have collaborated with physicians, nurses, paramedics and CEOs in 16 regional and community hospital sites, developing the first Local Health Integration Network (LHIN)-wide program in Ontario for emergency heart attack.

"This means earlier treatment in smaller centres and a faster transfer to the Heart Institute for patients if a major heart attack is diagnosed," said Dr. Michel Le May, Director, UOHI Coronary Care Unit. "Survival of heart attack patients is increased, emergency room congestion is eased and vital wait times are reduced. Every minute counts when the coronary artery is blocked, and this program is designed to save lives."

Dr. Le May's research shows that in-hospital deaths at UOHI dropped 50%, to less than 5% among patients suffering a type of heart attack called a ST-Elevation Myocardial Infarction (STEMI). STEMI is one of the most common forms of heart attack. The Heart Institute STEMI program includes pre-hospital diagnosis by paramedics and pre-treatment by clot-busting drugs (thrombolytics) for patients who cannot immediately receive emergency angioplasty—restoring blood flow by opening the artery with a balloon insert through a catheter.

In some cases, receiving emergency treatment within a very fast time frame remains difficult for many potential heart attack patients living outside the urban and suburban environment. Teams at medical centres across the entire Champlain LHIN—within a 200-km radius of UOHI—are using the Heart Institute's protocols to both identify and speed the treatment of STEMI, then transfer high-risk patients immediately to the Heart Institute.