In the hands of a lone rescuer, regardless of whether it is a layperson or a health care provider, children of all ages (excluding newborns) should be treated using a 30:2 compression-ventilation ratio, said Dr. CPR guidelines specialized for lone rescuers of children and adults Thus, a ...
P. S. Martin, P. S. Theobald, A. M. Kemp, S. O'Brien, S. A. Maguire, and M. D. Jones, "Chest compression performance during infant CPR," Arch Dis Child, vol. 96, pp. A86, 2011.P. S. Martin, P. S. Theobald, A. M. Kemp, S. O'Brien, S. A. Maguire, and M. D...
Compression rate of infant CPR in three positionsdoi:10.1016/j.resuscitation.2013.08.190Proebstl, Cordula AgnesGranegger, MarcusRoehrich, MichaelMuehlbacher, JakobESResuscitation
According to an embodiment of the present invention, a chest compression module for infants comprises: a torso support unit including a support surface; a compression unit which is arranged to face the torso support unit, of which one side is connected to the torso support unit to be rotatable...
D. Jones, "Chest compression performance during infant CPR," Arch Dis Child, vol. 96, pp. A86, 2011.P. S. Martin, P. S. Theobald, A. M. Kemp, S. O'Brien, S. A. Maguire, and M. D. Jones, "Chest compression performance during in- fant CPR," Arch. Dis. Child, vol. 96,...
D. Jones, "Chest compression performance during infant CPR," Arch Dis Child, vol. 96, pp. A86, 2011.P. S. Martin, P. S. Theobald, A. M. Kemp, S. O'Brien, S. A. Maguire, and M. D. Jones, "Chest compression performance during in- fant CPR," Arch. Dis. Child, vol. 96,...
Two-thumb versus two-finger chest compression in an infant model of prolonged CPRdoi:10.1016/S0196-0644(99)80120-6ML DorfsmanJJ MenegazziRJ WadasT AubleRetour au numéro
Evaluation of new two-thumb chest compression technique for infant CPR performed by novice physicians. A randomized, crossover, manikin trialdoi:10.1016/j.ajem.2016.12.045Background The impact of high-quality chest compressions during CPR for the patients' outcome is undisputed, as it is ...
Aim: The quality of chest compression (CC) delivered during neonatal and infant cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) is identified as the most important factor to achieve the increase of survival rate without major neurological deficit to the patients. The objective of the study was to systematically ...
Correspondence to: A novel retraining strategy of chest compression skills for infant CPR results in high skill retention for longerINFANTSOCCUPATIONAL retrainingWe were particularly interested in the trend for students who received more training and had the shortest retention interval to do worst in ...