Rescue Breathing in CPR
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CPR
kidshealth.org — “Every parent should know how and when to administer CPR. When performed correctly, CPR can save a child's life by restoring breathing and circulation until advanced life support can be given by medical care providers.” View full resource at kidshealth.org
Most Recently Shared on January 11, 2011 at 6:52 pm By:
Want to know about #CPR (#cardiopulmonary #resuscitation)? http://ow.ly/3C0xu
Studies: CPR Without Rescue Breathing OK
webmd.com — “Bystanders who perform CPR on patients with suspected heart attacks can safely skip the rescue breathing component -- typically called mouth-to-mouth resuscitation -- and just perform the chest compressions, according to two new studies.” View full resource at webmd.com
Most Recently Shared on July 29, 2010 at 4:56 pm By:
webMD: Studies: CPR Without Rescue Breathing OK http://bit.ly/cVk4U0 Full http://bit.ly/bOyF1B
British Heart Foundation - CPR made easy
bhf.org.uk — “Untrained bystanders should give the kiss a miss and opt for chest compressions only during CPR” View full resource at bhf.org.uk
Most Recently Shared on January 4, 2012 at 4:43 pm By:
@Jam3sPJ We have their backing, see here for more: http://t.co/tf0ZFFUH Not tweeting together because it's not a joint campaign
Press the chest: Heart group advises compressions first, then rescue breaths for standard CPR | StarTribune.com
startribune.com — “Press the chest: Heart group advises compressions first, then rescue breaths for standard CPR | StarTribune.com” View full resource at startribune.com
Most Recently Shared on October 18, 2010 at 5:39 am By:
Press the chest: Heart group advises compressions first, then rescue breaths for standard CPR: http://bit.ly/crbiax
Emergency Medicine Article | Predicting non-cardiac aetiology: a strategy to allocate rescue breathing during bystander CPR
mdlinx.com — “Predicting non-cardiac aetiology: a strategy to allocate rescue breathing during bystander CPR” View full resource at mdlinx.com
Most Recently Shared on October 10, 2011 at 11:23 am By:
Predicting non-cardiac aetiology: a strategy to allocate rescue breathing during bystander CPR: Resuscitation http://t.co/CcbVPlib #ER
Bystander CPR -- no breaths necessary, studies say: When someone collapses suddenly, mouth-to-mouth rescue breathi... http://bit.ly/aLX8sO
health.yahoo.net — “Bystander CPR -- no breaths necessary, studies say: When someone collapses suddenly, mouth-to-mouth rescue breathi... http://bit.ly/aLX8sO” View full resource at health.yahoo.net
Most Recently Shared on July 28, 2010 at 9:45 pm By:
Bystander CPR -- no breaths necessary, studies say: When someone collapses suddenly, mouth-to-mouth rescue breathi... http://bit.ly/aLX8sO
CPR Without Mouth-to-Mouth Rescue Breathing May Be Better for Many Victims of Cardiac Arrest: http://bit.ly/aPbCDx
hopkinsmedicine.org — “CPR Without Mouth-to-Mouth Rescue Breathing May Be Better for Many Victims of Cardiac Arrest: http://bit.ly/aPbCDx” View full resource at hopkinsmedicine.org
Most Recently Shared on July 29, 2010 at 12:55 pm By:
CPR Without Mouth-to-Mouth Rescue Breathing May Be Better for Many Victims of Cardiac Arrest: http://bit.ly/aPbCDx
During CPR, Locking Lips May Not Be Necessary http://n.pr/dtInQl
npr.org — “During CPR, Locking Lips May Not Be Necessary http://n.pr/dtInQl” View full resource at npr.org
Most Recently Shared on July 29, 2010 at 5:11 am By:
During CPR, Locking Lips May Not Be Necessary http://n.pr/dtInQl
CPR without Mouth-To-Mouth Rescue Breathing May be Better for Many Victims of Cardiac Arrest
newswise.com — “A leading expert in cardiopulmonary resuscitation says two new studies from U.S. and European researchers support the case for dropping mouth-to-mouth, or rescue breathing by bystanders and using hands-only chest compressions during the life-saving practice, better known as CPR.” View full resource at newswise.com
Most Recently Shared on July 28, 2010 at 10:37 pm By:
CPR without Mouth-To-Mouth Rescue Breathing May be Better for Many Victims of Cardiac Arrest: A leading expert in ... http://bit.ly/aVNRck
CPR without Mouth-To-Mouth Rescue Breathing May be Better for Many Victims of Cardiac Arrest
newswise.com — “A leading expert in cardiopulmonary resuscitation says two new studies from U.S. and European researchers support the case for dropping mouth-to-mouth, or rescue breathing by bystanders and using hands-only chest compressions during the life-saving practice, better known as CPR.” View full resource at newswise.com
Most Recently Shared on July 30, 2010 at 7:38 pm By:
CPR without Mouth-to-Mouth might work better for cardiac arrest http://bit.ly/cwDvbp research shows chest compressions work alone
CPR switch: Chest presses first, then give breaths
health.yahoo.net — “New guidelines out Monday switch up the steps for CPR, telling rescuers to start with hard, fast chest presses before giving mouth-to-mouth.” View full resource at health.yahoo.net
Most Recently Shared on October 18, 2010 at 5:09 am By:
CPR switch: Chest presses first, then give breaths http://bit.ly/dslXqb
The Checkup - A better way to give CPR?
voices.washingtonpost.com — “Would you be more willing to administer CPR (cardiopulmonary resuscitation) to a stranger if you could skip the mouth-to-mouth part? New research presented last week at the American Heart Association's Resuscitation Symposium shows that would be just fine. In fact, performing the rapid, deep chest compressions without mouth-to-mouth breathing may...” View full resource at voices.washingtonpost.com
Most Recently Shared on November 23, 2009 at 1:06 pm By:
Symposier - Chest compression-only CPR improves survival rates for cardiac arrest
symposier.com — “Uploaded and shared in Youtube by: wustlpa — Standard cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) involves alternating chest compressions with rescue breaths. But heart attack patients who receive CPR from bystanders fare better if their resuscitators skip the rescue breaths and do only chest compression, according to a study led by researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis.” View full resource at symposier.com
Most Recently Shared on August 3, 2011 at 6:19 pm By:
Chest compression-only CPR improves survival rates for cardiac arrest. http://bit.ly/qi7NCz
CPR Switch: Compressions First, Then Breath - QualityPoint Technologies
qualitypointtech.net — “New guidelines out Monday switch up the steps for CPR, telling rescuers to start with hard, fast chest presses before giving mouth-to-mouth. (Source: WDSU.com - Health)MedWorm Message: Register forMedMatcha, MedWorm's medical advertising network, and receive $5 free advertising.” View full resource at qualitypointtech.net
Most Recently Shared on October 18, 2010 at 9:01 am By:
CPR Switch: Compressions First, Then Breath: New guidelines out Monday switch up the steps for CPR, telling rescue... http://bit.ly/czf45y
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Featuring the top 3 experts for this topic
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KidsHealth
KidsHealth is the most-trusted website for health and development information written for parents, kids and teens.
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Heart Health
Get the latest news, information, and research on your heart. Re-tweet if you want.
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BHF
The British Heart Foundation is the UK's leading heart charity, beating heart disease together
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