People living in low-income communities wait about four minutes longer for ambulances to respond to their call for help when they are having a heart attack, a new study has found.
In communities with annual median incomes between $57,000 and $113,000, the study found that ambulances arrive in an average of 37.5 minutes – faster than in communities where the annual median income is between $20,250 and $42,642, where the typical wait time is 43 minutes.
Neither result is anywhere near industry benchmarks of 4, 8, and 15 minutes for delivering specific services in response to heart attack symptoms.

Such findings have important implications for the communities served by private safety-net hospitals.
Learn more about the study, its methodology, and its findings in the report “A US National Study of the Association Between Income and Ambulance Response Time in Cardiac Arrest,” which can be found here, on the JAMA Open Network web site.

