New research shows that bystander CPR can substantially improve a person's odds of surviving a cardiac arrest while avoiding ...
Imagine a loved one suffering a heart attack in their sleep. For one local family, that was a reality, and thanks to a team ...
The sooner a lay rescuer (bystander) starts cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) on a person having a cardiac arrest at home or in public, up to 10 minutes after the arrest, the better the chances of ...
Detailed in the new guideline update: Anyone removed from the water without showing signs of normal breathing or ...
Meet 16-year-old spencer davis. A teen in blair county who survived cardiac arrest on a football field in september.Spencer and other organizers advocated for a ...
Additionally, those who received CPR within two minutes of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest had an 81 percent higher rate of survival up to release from the hospital. They also had a 95 percent higher ...
Almost two months to the day that forever altered the trajectory of his life, the Hollidaysburg community came out in a show ...
Starting CPR within the first 10 minutes of someone having a cardiac arrest at home or in public may greatly improve their chances for survival and protect their brain function, according to new ...
Women were less likely than men to receive cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) in public, however, this disparity improved ...
The sooner a lay rescuer (bystander) starts cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) on a person having a cardiac arrest at home ...
When bystander CPR was initiated more than 10 minutes after cardiac arrest, bystander CPR, compared to not receiving the lifesaving assistance, was no longer associated with improved survival.