Media release
EMBARGOED BEFORE 12.01 am WEDNESDAY APRIL 13
Farmers with acute chest pain are uncertain how and when to seek help
A pilot study of the prevalence of cardiac risk factors in a group of agricultural workers and of their decision-making
abilities with regard to when and how they would seek help when experiencing chest pain has found that most put
themselves at risk of dying.
Dr Tim Baker, from the Centre for Rural Emergency Medicine at Deakin University School of Medicine, and Scott McCombe,
Cate Mercer-Grant, and Susan Brumby, from the National Centre for Farmer Health at Deakin University School of Medicine
and Western District Health Service, studied almost 200 farm men and women recruited from 20 rural Victorian sites.
Their study is published as an Early View article in Emergency Medicine Australasia, the journal of the Australasian
College for Emergency Medicine.
The farmers underwent health assessments for total cholesterol, blood glucose, weight, height and blood pressure, and
they completed a survey to determine their knowledge of chest pain treatment, local emergency services, and likely
response to chest pain.
Each year in regional Australia approximately 9000 people die of coronary artery disease, with acute myocardial
infarction accounting for approximately half of these deaths.
Nine hundred of these lives would be saved if mortality rates in regional areas were the same as those in metropolitan
areas.
The higher regional mortality is partly explained by a higher incidence of cardiac risk factors, the researchers said.
Delays in initiating treatment for acute cardiac events in rural areas might also contribute.
Treatment in the first two hours following a myocardial infarction can decrease mortality by half. Also, one in four
people who experience a myocardial infarction die from cardiac arrest within one hour of their first chest pain.
Farmers and non-town dwellers are often thought to be the slowest rural Australians to seek emergency medical treatment.
Reasons given include the poorly defined and stereotypical concept of stoicism and an apparent fatalistic acceptance of
supposed outcomes.
In this study, the researchers found 61% of the farmers had cardiac risk factors, with 61% of men and 74% of women
either overweight or obese.
When asked to name their nearest ED, 10% of participants nominated health services or towns where no ED exists.
And 67% of respondents believed it was safe to travel to hospital by car while potentially having a myocardial
infarction.
"This group of agricultural workers were at considerable risk of experiencing acute coronary events, but many would make
decisions about when and how to seek medical help for chest pain that are at odds with published community guidelines,"
the researchers concluded.
The researchers said a close relationship with a general practitioner remains the cornerstone of good rural health care,
but contacting or visiting a local doctor at their clinic is not recommended when a patient has chest pain.
"Despite this group's beliefs to the contrary, acute coronary syndrome can seldom be excluded in a clinic setting, and
it has been shown to delay hospital presentation by at least one hour.
"In the present study, it appears that many farmers saw being driven to hospital as an acceptable alternative to calling
the ambulance. Many reasons have been suggested for the reluctance of rural people to use ambulance services.
"Most rural people can recall an anecdote, from word of mouth or the media, where the use of an ambulance service was
said to result in a poor health outcome.
" There is a widespread belief that travelling by car is quicker and thus safer.
"One participant wrote on their questionnaire that it was 'sometimes quicker to drive to hospital rather than get an
ambulance'. Although the wait at home might be shorter in this scenario, the time to care, which is the most important
factor, has been shown to be longer on average.
"Calling the ambulance also provides immediate telephone advice and activates the emergency medical system.
"Paramedics also have the ability to defibrillate once on the scene. From our group, it is not difficult to foresee a
tragedy when someone travels by car for 30 minues to an ED where the doctor is unavailable or, even worse, to a town
without an ED."
Improving health literacy among farm men and women is of the utmost importance as they have higher rates of clinical
risk factors and appear to be lagging in emergency knowledge and services when compared with their urban and regional
counterparts, the researchers maintain.
"Farmers are generally the most remotely located within a population and would achieve greater benefit from acting
rapidly in response to acute myocardial events and other medical emergencies.
"Programmes addressing behavioural barriers to accessing care and improving emergency decision making within the farming
cohort might be readily translatable into rural lives saved."
ends