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Analysis of institutional authors

Miro OAuthorEscalada XAuthorGil VAuthorSanchez CAuthorAguiló SAuthor

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August 1, 2017
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Prehospital emergency care of patients with acute heart failure in Spain: The semica study (Emergency medical response systems for patients with acute heart failure)

Publicated to:Emergencias: Revista De La Sociedad Española De Medicina De Urgencias Y Emergencias. 29 (4): 223-230 - 2017-08-01 29(4), DOI:

Authors: Miro, Oscar; Llorens, Pere; Escalada, Xavier; Herrero, Pablo; Jacob, Javier; Gil, Victor; Xipell, Carolina; Sanchez, Carolina; Aguilo, Sira; Martin-Sanchez, Francisco J

Affiliations

Aguilo, Sira - Author
Escalada, Xavier - Author
Fdn FISABIO, Inst Invest Sanitaria & Biomed Alicante ISABIAL, Alicante, Spain - Author
Gil, Victor - Author
Herrero, Pablo - Author
Hosp Clin Barcelona, Area Urgencias, Barcelona, Spain - Author
Hosp Clin San Carlos, Serv Med Prevent, Madrid, Spain - Author
Hosp Gen Alicante, Unidad Corta & Estancia Hospitalizac Domicilio, Serv Urgencias, Alicante, Spain - Author
Hosp Univ Bellvitge, Serv Urgencias, Barcelona, Spain - Author
Hosp Univ Cent Asturias, Serv Urgencias, Oviedo, Spain - Author
IDIBAPS, Grp Invest Urgencias Procesos & Patol, Barcelona, Spain - Author
Jacob, Javier - Author
Llorens, Pere - Author
Martin-Sanchez, Francisco J. - Author
Miro, Oscar - Author
Sanchez, Carolina - Author
Sistema Emergencies Med, Barcelona, Spain - Author
Univ Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain - Author
Univ Complutense Madrid, Inst Invest Sanitaria Hosp Clin San Carlos IdISSC, Madrid, Spain - Author
Univ Miguel Hernandez, Dept Med Clin, Alicante, Spain - Author
Xipell, Carolina - Author
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Abstract

To study the means of emergency transport used to bring patients with acute heart failure (AHF) to hospital emergency departments (EDs) and explore associations between factors, type of transport, and prehospital care received.We gathered the following information on patients treated for AHF at 34 Spanish hospital EDs: means of transport used (medicalized ambulance [MA], nonmedicalized ambulance [NMA], or private vehicle) and treatments administered before arrival at the hospital. Twenty-seven independent variables potentially related to type of transport used were also studied. Indicators of AHF severity were triage level assigned in the ED, need for admission, need for intensive care, in-hospital mortality, and 30-day mortality.A total of 6106 patients with a mean (SD) age of 80 years were included; 56.5% were women, 47.2% arrived in PVs, 37.8% in NMAs, and 15.0% in MAs. Use of an ambulance was associated with female sex, age over 80 years, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, a history of AHF, functional dependency, New York Heart Association class III-IV, sphincteral incontinence, labored breathing, orthopnea, cold skin, and sensory depression or restlessness. Assignment of a MA was directly associated with living alone, a history of ischemic heart disease, cold skin, sensory depression or restlessness, and high temperature; it was inversely associated with a history of falls. The rates of receipt of prehospital treatments and AHF severity level increased with use of MAs vs. NMAs vs. PV. Seventy-three percent of patients transported in MAs received oxygen, 29% received a diuretic, 13.5% a vasodilator, and 4.7% noninvasive ventilation.Characteristics of the patient with AHF are associated with the assignment of type of transport to a hospital ED. Assignment appears to be related to severity. Treatment given during MA transport could be increased.

Keywords

Acute heart failureAmbulance servicesEmergency health servicesInsuficiencia cardiaca agudaMortalidadMortalityServicios de emergencias médicasTransporte sanitarioTratamientoTreatment

Quality index

Bibliometric impact. Analysis of the contribution and dissemination channel

The work has been published in the journal Emergencias: Revista De La Sociedad Española De Medicina De Urgencias Y Emergencias due to its progression and the good impact it has achieved in recent years, according to the agency WoS (JCR), it has become a reference in its field. In the year of publication of the work, 2017, it was in position 3/26, thus managing to position itself as a Q1 (Primer Cuartil), in the category Emergency Medicine. Notably, the journal is positioned above the 90th percentile.

From a relative perspective, and based on the normalized impact indicator calculated from World Citations provided by WoS (ESI, Clarivate), it yields a value for the citation normalization relative to the expected citation rate of: 3.27. This indicates that, compared to works in the same discipline and in the same year of publication, it ranks as a work cited above average. (source consulted: ESI Nov 14, 2024)

This information is reinforced by other indicators of the same type, which, although dynamic over time and dependent on the set of average global citations at the time of their calculation, consistently position the work at some point among the top 50% most cited in its field:

  • Weighted Average of Normalized Impact by the Scopus agency: 3.22 (source consulted: FECYT Feb 2024)

Specifically, and according to different indexing agencies, this work has accumulated citations as of 2025-07-03, the following number of citations:

  • WoS: 48
  • Scopus: 47
  • Europe PMC: 15

Leadership analysis of institutional authors

There is a significant leadership presence as some of the institution’s authors appear as the first or last signer, detailed as follows: First Author (Miró Andreu, Òscar) .