RT Journal Article T1 EuReCa ONE-27 Nations, ONE Europe, ONE Registry: A prospective one month analysis of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest outcomes in 27 countries in Europe. A1 Gräsner, Jan-Thorsten A1 Lefering, Rolf A1 Koster, Rudolph W A1 Masterson, Siobhán A1 Böttiger, Bernd W A1 Herlitz, Johan A1 Wnent, Jan A1 Tjelmeland, Ingvild B M A1 Ortiz, Fernando Rosell A1 Maurer, Holger A1 Baubin, Michael A1 Mols, Pierre A1 Hadžibegović, Irzal A1 Ioannides, Marios A1 Škulec, Roman A1 Wissenberg, Mads A1 Salo, Ari A1 Hubert, Hervé A1 Nikolaou, Nikolaos I A1 Lóczi, Gerda A1 Svavarsdóttir, Hildigunnur A1 Semeraro, Federico A1 Wright, Peter J A1 Clarens, Carlo A1 Pijls, Ruud A1 Cebula, Grzegorz A1 Correia, Vitor Gouveia A1 Cimpoesu, Diana A1 Raffay, Violetta A1 Trenkler, Stefan A1 Markota, Andrej A1 Strömsöe, Anneli A1 Burkart, Roman A1 Perkins, Gavin D A1 Bossaert, Leo L A1 EuReCa ONE Collaborators, K1 Cardiac arrest K1 Emergency medicine, Europe K1 Epidemiology K1 Resuscitation K1 Resuscitation registry AB The aim of the EuReCa ONE study was to determine the incidence, process, and outcome for out of hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) throughout Europe. This was an international, prospective, multi-centre one-month study. Patients who suffered an OHCA during October 2014 who were attended and/or treated by an Emergency Medical Service (EMS) were eligible for inclusion in the study. Data were extracted from national, regional or local registries. Data on 10,682 confirmed OHCAs from 248 regions in 27 countries, covering an estimated population of 174 million. In 7146 (66%) cases, CPR was started by a bystander or by the EMS. The incidence of CPR attempts ranged from 19.0 to 104.0 per 100,000 population per year. 1735 had ROSC on arrival at hospital (25.2%), Overall, 662/6414 (10.3%) in all cases with CPR attempted survived for at least 30 days or to hospital discharge. The results of EuReCa ONE highlight that OHCA is still a major public health problem accounting for a substantial number of deaths in Europe. EuReCa ONE very clearly demonstrates marked differences in the processes for data collection and reported outcomes following OHCA all over Europe. Using these data and analyses, different countries, regions, systems, and concepts can benchmark themselves and may learn from each other to further improve survival following one of our major health care events. YR 2016 FD 2016-06-16 LK http://hdl.handle.net/10668/10192 UL http://hdl.handle.net/10668/10192 LA en DS RISalud RD Apr 6, 2025