WHO/EUROPE at EUSEM2025 in Vienna

At EUSEM 2025, WHO/Europe highlighted how emergency departments (EDs) are on the frontline of alcohol-related harm, and how their data can drive real change. Drawing on case studies from Canada and Lithuania, the session showed how ED evidence has mobilized communities, informed legislation, and relieved pressure on frontline staff. Participants also learned about a new WHO/EUSEM pilot study that will bring together emergency departments across Europe to systematically document youth alcohol-related ED presentations. The aim: to build a stronger evidence base that can shape prevention, improve care pathways, and strengthen public health policy. 

In addition, screening and brief intervention (SBI) for alcohol sessions were held. A booth exhibited information about EHAA and other WHO resources.

Results from Emergency Medicine Day 2025 study now available

One of the largest international surveys into job satisfaction among emergency department workers has revealed that while the majority found their work satisfying and rewarding, there are still many areas where improvements are needed, according to research presented at the EUSEM 2025- European Emergency Medicine Congress on 28 September 2025. The paper, “Global Job Satisfaction Among Emergency Medicine Professionals: Results from the 2025 Emergency Medicine Day Survey”, is published in the European Journal of Emergency Medicine

Read the paper here.

Read press release here.

 

2025 YEMD Chair & Co-chair election results

2025 YEMD Chair & Co-chair election results

We can officially announce that Dr. Michela Cascio has been elected Chair of the YEMD section with 41 votes and Dr. Alessandra Iorfida has been elected Co-chair with 24 votes.

Many congratulations to both of them and to all the other candidates for standing in the election.

chair

Michela YEMD 2

Dr Michela Cascio, Italy

41 votes 

CO-chair

Alessandra

Dr Alessandra Iorfida, Italy

24 votes 

 

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

2025 Board Election Results

We would like to announce the results of the 2025 elections for President Elect and Vice President.

Professor Christoph Dodt has been elected President with 276 votes and Professor Ashraf Butt has been elected Vice-President with 114 votes.

Many congratulations to them both.

 

president-elect

PHOTO-2025-05-07-14-44-21.jpg

Professor Christoph Dodt, Germany

276 votes

 

 

 

 

  

Vice Preisdent

Ash Butt

Professor Ashraf Butt, Ireland

114 votes 

 

 

 

 

 

 

PRESS RELEASE: Neurological outcomes after patients suffer cardiac arrest at home are similar between low-and high-income areas in Vienna

Press Release: Neurological outcomes after patients suffer cardiac arrest at home are similar between low-and high-income areas in Vienna

Embargo: 00.01 hrs CEST on Wednesday 1 October 2025

Vienna, Austria: People who have a cardiac arrest in their own homes have similar neurological outcomes regardless of socioeconomic background, according to research presented at the European Emergency Medicine Congress today (Wednesday) [1].

However, the study of 676 patients who received treatment in the Department of Emergency Medicine at the Medical University of Vienna suggested that those who lived in lower-income areas may be less likely to receive cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) from bystanders compared to people suffering a cardiac arrest (when the heart stops pumping blood around the body) in higher-income areas – a finding that the researchers say requires further studies to see whether it is a real effect.

The study was carried out by researchers led by Drs Jürgen Grafeneder and Christoph Schriefl at the Medical University of Vienna. They looked at outcomes for patients who experienced an out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) and were treated in their emergency department between January 2020 and December 2022. They took data from the department’s CPR records, and looked at patients’ addresses, which they linked to electoral districts. These districts were then matched with the average household income for each area using data from Austria’s National Statistical System.

The researchers assessed neurological outcomes, such as brain damage and thinking ability, one, six and twelve months after the OHCA. They also investigated the association between these outcomes and household incomes, taking into account factors specific to each patient’s condition and any interventions or other treatments before they arrived at the hospital.

Ms Hannah Voith, a medical student at the Medical University of Vienna, presented the findings to the Congress. She said: “We found no significant association between patients’ income and neurological outcomes after an out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. For cases that happened at the patient’s home address, we divided patients’ incomes into quartiles and examined basic life support rates from bystanders across the four groups. We observed a trend towards lower rates for patients in the bottom quartile with the lowest incomes  – 64% – compared to 78% for patients from the top quartile with the highest incomes, but this trend was not statistically significant.

“Even though this trend is not significant, it does suggest disparities in pre-hospital care in lower income areas, and underscores the importance of targeted public health interventions, such as expanding first aid training, to reduce inequities and improve survival after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. Our analysis emphasises the complex relationship between social factors and emergency care outcomes, highlighting the importance of further research in this field.

“Multiple studies have established that early bystander-performed cardiopulmonary resuscitation significantly enhances both survival rates and favourable neurologic outcomes following out-of-hospital cardiac arrest.

“In addition, it is important to note that the group of patients we studied was pre-selected, as we only included patients who were admitted to the hospital. There is a high likelihood that patients who never received bystander basic life support did not enter our registry, because they died before reaching the hospital. Therefore, much of the effect of basic life support, or lack of it, would be ‘filtered out’ before our population was assembled and would not notably impact the neurologic outcomes we report.

“The results suggest that further research is needed to investigate bystander basic life support rates between varying income levels. This could help to promote basic life support training and awareness. Public health strategies that boost bystander readiness across all societal groups may help reduce disparities and improve outcomes. For policymakers, this involves investing in accessible, low-threshold education and training programmes.

She concluded: “To our knowledge, this is the first Austrian study to systematically examine the link between patients’ income and neurological outcomes after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. It is also unique in combining detailed registry data with geosocial analysis, providing new insights into regional variations in emergency response.”

While recognising that Vienna’s infrastructure and professional preclinical emergency care network are unique, the researchers say it would be helpful to see what happens in other large cities in Austria, such as Graz. In addition, they plan to evaluate bystander basic life support rates across Vienna, investigate long-term outcomes for patients, and for patients who have received extracorporeal cardiopulmonary resuscitation – a procedure that passes a patient’s blood supply through a machine to oxygenate the blood.

Strengths of the study include its use of a large, validated registry of OHCAs in Vienna, detailed socioeconomic information, and the focus on a clinically meaningful outcome: neurological survival. Limitations include the fact that the study was observational, socioeconomic data were based on geographic area rather than on information for individual patients, and infrastructural factors, such as proximity to specialised care centres such as Vienna General Hospital, may have influenced outcomes but were not fully accounted for in the analysis.

Dr Felix Lorang is a member of the EUSEM abstract selection committee. He is head of the emergency department at SRH Zentralklinikum Suhl, Thuringia, Germany, and was not involved with the research. He said: “These findings suggest that if someone survives an out-of-hospital cardiac arrest and can be discharged from hospital, then their neurological outcomes are not affected by their socioeconomic background. We already know that the most important intervention on the way to a favourable neurological outcome is bystander CPR. However, the trend the researchers observed towards lower CPR rates in lower-income areas of Vienna definitely deserves further investigation. More education and training of people everywhere, not just in Vienna, is needed to try to improve the numbers who can offer CPR in an emergency.”

(ends)

[1] Abstract no: OA023, “The impact of socioeconomic factors on the outcome in adult out-of-hospital cardiac arrest patients – a retrospective data analysis”, by Hannah Voith. Cardio-respiratory session, Wednesday 1 October, 09:00-10:30 hrs CEST, Schubert 4.

Funding: The study was funded by the Medial Scientific Fund of the Mayor of the City of Vienna.