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LetterPolicy Forum

Using Drone Technology to Minimize Socioeconomic and Ethnic Cardiac Arrest Survival Disparities Within North Carolina

Rebecca Schilling, Paul Kleinschmidt and Judith Borger
North Carolina Medical Journal November 2019, 80 (6) 381-382; DOI: https://doi.org/10.18043/ncm.80.6.381
Rebecca Schilling
emergency medicine resident, Cape Fear Valley Hospital Fayetteville, North Carolina
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Paul Kleinschmidt
emergency medicine residency program director, Cape Fear Valley Hospital, Fayetteville, North Carolina
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Judith Borger
emergency medicine residency core faculty, Cape Fear Valley Hospital, Fayetteville, North Carolina
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  • For correspondence: judeviolado@gmail.com
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References

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    Recent trends in survival of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest in the United States.Circulation. 2014;130(21):1876–1882.
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    1. United States Census Bureau
    Quick Facts North Carolina. U.S. Department of Commerce website. https://www.census.gov/quickfacts/fact/table/NC/PST045218. Accessed June 13th, 2019.
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    1. Chan PS,
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    Racial differences in sudden cardiac death. J Electrocardiol. 2014;47(6):815-818.
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    Racial and ethnic differences in outcomes after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest: Hispanics and Blacks may fare worse than non-Hispanic Whites. Resuscitation. 2019;137:29-34.
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North Carolina Medical Journal: 80 (6)
North Carolina Medical Journal
Vol. 80, Issue 6
November-December 2019
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Using Drone Technology to Minimize Socioeconomic and Ethnic Cardiac Arrest Survival Disparities Within North Carolina
Rebecca Schilling, Paul Kleinschmidt, Judith Borger
North Carolina Medical Journal Nov 2019, 80 (6) 381-382; DOI: 10.18043/ncm.80.6.381

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Using Drone Technology to Minimize Socioeconomic and Ethnic Cardiac Arrest Survival Disparities Within North Carolina
Rebecca Schilling, Paul Kleinschmidt, Judith Borger
North Carolina Medical Journal Nov 2019, 80 (6) 381-382; DOI: 10.18043/ncm.80.6.381
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