Medical

March 31, 2008

American Heart Association: New CPR Guidelines

In an effort to get more bystanders to perform CPR, the American Heart Association issued new guidelines today changing the way it teaches the lifesaving technique by eliminating mouth-to-mouth breaths.

When an adult collapses, bystanders are to call 9-1-1, then start hard, fast compressions at the center of a victim’s chest until paramedics arrive.

This is an easier, less complicated way to aid a person with sudden cardiac arrest. You don’t have to remember all the steps of traditional CPR – checking the airway, tilting the head, remembering the number of compressions to alternate with the number of breaths.

People don’t do CPR for a variety of reasons, including that they’re not trained or they think they’ll break a rib. Then there’s the “yuck factor” of putting their mouth on a stranger’s.

Experts found that pumping the heart is the most important piece to help the victim, and they want bystanders to do it.

“We want people to know we think it’s OK for them to help even if they’ve never been trained,” said Dr. Michael Sayre, an emergency-room physician at Ohio State University Medical Center and chairman of the heart association’s committee writing the recommendations.

If you’re alone when someone collapses, he said, compress the victim’s chest until EMS arrives, even if you get tired. If someone else is around, “after a couple minutes they can trade off,” Sayre said.

In Columbus, he said, only about one-quarter of the people who collapse from sudden cardiac arrest get CPR. Doing chest compressions immediately will double or triple a person’s chance of surviving.

“So, if people are even doing that, they’re doing the most important part,” said Capt. Dave Roggenkamp, a paramedic with the Columbus Division of Fire.

After Arizona paramedics began using compressions-only CPR, the survival rates tripled for adults suffering sudden cardiac arrest, according to results published this month in the Journal of the American Medical Association.

The heart association’s new guidelines should not be used on infants, children or adults whose cardiac arrest is from respiratory causes such as a drug overdose or near-drowning.

January 17, 2008

Wide Awake or Half Asleep?

Tiredness test.  It's 10:30 pm EST and I am unable to respond any faster than 304 (mostly scoring in the 330-360 range).

May 07, 2007

Laparoscopic Surgery For Diverticulitis

My brother-in-law most unfortunately has to have part of his colon resected due to repeated bouts of diverticulitis.  He asked me to do some research about the procedure for him. I did a google search, of course,  but I figured I might as well also put out a blogging APB (aka in blogging parlance as a "bleg")  and see if it turns up anything. 

Ahoy out there:  Anyone know anything about this procedure?  Any good websites out there?  Message boards?  Mailing lists? 

Oh, and in case anyone ends up here looking for info themselves, here's something very interesting that I found:

Chewing gum may shorten hospital stays after colon surgery, new research shows.

My Photo

Google: Search This Site


Blogs I Read


  •    









  • Politics Blogs - Blog Top Sites

  • Who links to me?



  • Listed on BlogShares


  • Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting







  • Locations of visitors to this page











  • Subscribe with Bloglines


  • Blogarama - The Blog Directory


  • Blog Trashed by
    Mandarin

Blidget


  • Get this widget from Widgetbox
Blog powered by TypePad
Member since 01/2004

Newsvine Top News

Subscribe in Bloglines

Subscribe in NewsGator Online

I heart FeedBurner

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner