July 2002
A new national study has shown that the death rate for heart
attack patients at Marin General Hospital was well below the national
average during the last 11 months of 2001, as it has been in almost
all similar studies over the past decade.
The study, sponsored by Genentech, a leading biotech company in South
San Francisco, showed that the national mortality rate was 9.7 percent
and the rate at Marin General was an average of 7.7 percent among
1,000 similar sized hospitals throughout the U.S. In fact, for
patients who were treated with immediate, or primary, angioplasty over
the past three years, the death rate was 4.2 percent.
MGH Chief of Cardiology Dr. Joel Sklar said, "Heart patients in Marin
get top level emergency cardiac care. Our Cardiac Catheterization team
treats a high volume of patients and many recover faster because of
early intervention for cardiac events. Most are able to leave the
hospital in three and a half days."
MGH is also 20 minutes faster in treating cardiac patients than other
similar hospitals in the survey. On average, only 90 minutes elapse
from the time they enter the Emergency Department until the blocked
blood vessel that is causing the heart attack has been opened with
angioplasty. For patients at like hospitals, the "time to treatment"
averages 110 minutes.
"Every minute counts in saving heart muscle," Sklar said. "A heart
attack with little muscle damage can become a massive one within a few
hours if blood flow is not restored. Our coordinated program,
involving the Emergency Department, the Cardiac Catheterization Lab
and the Cardiac Care Unit, results in excellent outcomes for patients
with acute heart attacks."
Heart attacks are caused by blocked coronary arteries. Generally,
plaque accumulates in the blood vessels over time, but there may be no
symptoms. If a plaque becomes unstable and a crack develops, a blood
clot may form, completely obstructing blood flow and damaging or
killing heart muscle. This is the mechanism behind most heart attacks.
Immediate, or primary angioplasty, offers the best chance to quickly
open the blocked blood vessel. MGH's catheterization laboratory, the
only one in Marin County, is available 24 hours a day, seven days a
week, and treats approximately 75 acute heart attack patients per year
with angioplasty. The total number of angioplasties performed at MGH
per year is approximately 350.
Heart attacks remain the number one killer of adult Americans, causing
more deaths, in both men and women, than all other diseases combined.
As many as 725,000 people die yearly from heart disease, many without
previous symptoms.
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