European Journal of Cardiovascular Nursing | 2021

The psychological and behavioural factors associated with laypeople initiating CPR for out-of-hospital cardiac arrest: a systematic review

 
 
 

Abstract


\n \n \n Type of funding sources: Public grant(s) – National budget only. Main funding source(s): Chief Scientist Office, Scottish Government\n \n \n \n BICeP Study Group\n Background\n Prompt, effective CPR greatly increases the chances of survival in out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. However, it is often not provided, even by people who have previously undertaken training. Psychological and behavioural factors are likely to be important in relation to CPR initiation by lay-people but have not yet been systematically identified.\n Objective\n To identify the psychological and behavioural factors associated with CPR initiation amongst lay-people.\xa0\n Methods\xa0\xa0\n \n \n \n Cochrane Library, MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, PsycInfo and Google Scholar.\xa0\n \n \n \n Primary studies reporting psychological or behavioural factors and data on CPR initiation involving lay-people published (inception to 15th January 2020).\n \n \n \n Potential studies were screened and quality assessed independently by two reviewers. Study characteristics, psychological and behavioural factors associated with CPR initiation were extracted from included studies, categorised by study type and synthesised narratively.\xa0\n Results\n Ninety studies (132,429 participants) comprising various designs, populations and of mostly weak quality were identified. The strongest and most ecologically valid studies identified factors associated with CPR initiation: the overwhelming emotion of the situation, perceptions of capability, uncertainty about when CPR is appropriate, feeling unprepared\xa0 and fear of doing harm. Current evidence is limited by a preponderance of atheoretical cross-sectional surveys using unvalidated measures with relatively little formal testing of posited ‘predictors’.\n Conclusions\n We will present the psychological and behavioural factors that are likely useful foci for future interventions aiming to increase CPR initiation. The literature in this area would benefit from more robust study designs which make greater use of theory.\n

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.1093/eurjcn/zvab060.045
Language English
Journal European Journal of Cardiovascular Nursing

Full Text