
(credit: Michael Coghlan)
Moving on up to that deluxe apartment in the sky might actually increase your chances of moving on down—way down.
Living on or above the third floor of a high-rise significantly lowered the chances of people surviving cardiac arrest that struck at home, researchers report in the Canadian Medical Association Journal. The finding, gleaned from 7,842 cases of cardiac arrest in and around Toronto, suggests that the precious extra moments it takes paramedics and other first responders to get up to patients and get them to the hospital could make the difference between patients living and dying.
“With continuing construction of high-rise buildings, it is important to understand the potential effect of vertical height on patient outcomes after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest,” wrote the authors, led by Ian Drennan, a paramedic and researcher at St. Michael's Hospital in Toronto.