Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To analyse the effect of a primary care consultation at a health centre or at home and to determine the effect of the use of the pre-hospital electrocardiogram on thrombolytic delay. DESIGN: Analytical cross-sectional study. SETTING: La Safor county (136,000 inhabitants), Valencia, Spain. PATIENTS: Sample of 137 patients from the area admitted for acute myocardial infarction. INTERVENTION: None. MEASUREMENTS AND RESULTS: Multivariate analysis through Cox regression models of the thrombolytic delay, comparing the patients who attended a primary care centre (40, 29.2%) and those who called out a doctor to their home (26, 19.0%) with those who attended hospital (71, 51.8%). The thrombolysis proportions in the groups were analysed with logistic regression. Patients referred from primary care arrived at hospital later than those who attended directly, although a greater thrombolytic delay was only seen in those visited at home (RR 0.25, 95% CI 0.09-0.71). A primary care electrocardiogram (14 patients, 10.2%) reduced the thrombolytic delay (RR 8.81, 95% CI 1.20-64.91) by reducing intra-hospital delay. There were no differences between the groups for the thrombolysis proportion (67 patients, 48.9%). CONCLUSIONS: Patients with infarction seen in primary care reach hospital later. Calling and waiting for the doctor at home increases the thrombolytic delay. An electrocardiogram on the infarction patients who attend a health centre reduces thrombolytic delay by reducing intra-hospital delay.