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New
Technique In CPR Saves More Lives
By: Scott Lehnkering
In
what may prove to be the biggest shift in emergency
care of cardiac arrest in 40 years, cities across
the country are leading a move away from the
familiar practice of using mouth-to-mouth resuscitation.
In its place, the cities are recommending simple
chest compressions - pushing down repeatedly
on the victim's chest - to mimic a steady heartbeat.
The emergency medical directors who are behind
the shift say research in various cities suggests
it will save many more lives.
Cities
such as New York, Los Angeles and Chicago, have
decided to make the switch. They join at least
seven other cities that already are advising
911 callers to do chest compressions without
mouth-to-mouth "rescue breathing."
Doctors
are forgoing the rescue-breathing instructions
that have long been given by 911 dispatchers
in order to eliminate delays that can be caused
by bystanders reluctant to perform mouth-to-mouth
resuscitation or unable to understand the technique.
Instead,
the goal is to get chest compressions started
immediately after a cardiac-arrest victim collapses
and to keep the compressions going until trained
rescuers arrive. It is a lot easier to tell
a panicked person to just compress the chest
until rescuers arrive. They can start this critical
life saving technique as soon as they leave
the phone.
By
performing deep compressions - pushing the breastbone
down about 2 inches (one third to one half the
depth of the chest for children) and then releasing
it - untrained people have saved lives. Research
continues to favor chest compressions over rescue
breathing in those first critical minutes. During
that time, the blood in the brain and other
vital organs still has oxygen that was picked
up when it last passed through the lungs before
the heart stopped. The body needs chest compressions
to keep this blood moving.
For
now, the shift applies primarily to untrained
bystanders, the group most likely to reach victims
in the first critical minutes. In such emergencies,
lives generally are saved or lost within six
minutes. The emergency directors agreed that
trying to talk 911 callers through mouth-to-mouth
procedures was doing more harm than good because
it wasted time. Now, rescuers are arriving on
the scene to find 10 times more victims (60%
vs. 6%) getting lifesaving compressions when
not distracted by advice on breathing techniques.
The
American Heart Association also changed its
guidelines in 2005 to emphasize compression
over mouth-to-mouth.
The
new guidelines call for a lone rescuer to provide
30 chest compressions for every two rescue breaths.
That advice applies to victims of all ages,
except for newborn infants.
The
previous guidelines, issued in 2000, called
for 15 chest compressions for every two rescue
breaths. If two rescuers are performing CPR,
then they are to follow the previous ratio of
15 chest compressions to two rescue breaths.
"The
lay rescuer will be taught to begin chest compressions
immediately after delivering two rescue breaths
to the unresponsive victim who is not breathing,"
state the guidelines.
Each
rescue breath should be delivered in 1 second
and should produce visible chest rise. "Both
lay rescuers and healthcare providers should
deliver chest compressions that "push hard,
push fast" (rate of 100 compressions per minute)
in the center of the chest at the nipple line,
allow complete chest recoil between compressions,
and minimize interruptions in compressions for
all victims."
While
the heart association would prefer that all
adults be trained in CPR so that they can practice
their skills before they are faced with a crisis,
officials with the association agree that immediately
beginning compressions alone is better than
waiting even a minute or two to begin CPR.
Article
contributed by Scott Lehnkering
A
Hero For Life - CPR & Defibrillator Training
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