Search This Blog

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Calling 911

Calling 911 is really pretty simple, once you think through what the 911 operator needs to know:




You might feel a little silly practicing a 911 call out loud, but it will make the real call easier.

Bob

When do I perform CPR on someone?

You've just seen someone - probably a family member, a friend, or someone you see every day - become non-responsive. You sense there's something wrong, but you are not sure what to do.

Here's a really simple way to think this through:
  1. If it's not safe, don't do it. There is no sense in turning the chance to save a life into two obituaries.
  2. If a person becomes non-responsive - if you cannot wake them up - you need to call 911. It doesn't matter why the person is non-responsive.
  3. If there is any doubt in your mind as to whether the victim is breathing normally, you need to get that person onto his or her back on a hard, flat surface and begin chest compressions - 1.5 to 2 inches deep - at a rate of 100 compressions per minute.
I should point out that step 3 is more conservative than the American Heart Association protocol in that the AHA - in an effort to eliminate all possible confusion from the process - skips the breathing check before commencing chest compressions. SLICC, with the backing of members of its Medical Advisory Board, feels that the average citizen can tell if a non-responsive person is breathing normally or not. It would be inappropriate to begin chest compressions on someone who was breathing normally.

But that's how simple it is to decide whether to start CPR or not. If the victim is non-responsive, call 911. If the scene is not safe, call 911 and wait. If the scene is safe and the patient is not breathing normally, start chest compressions.

One in seven of you will witness at least one sudden cardiac arrest during your lifetime. Think it through so that you can act with confidence. Please take a CPR course - either from SLICC or the American Red Cross or the American Heart Association.

Bob

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Misconceptions about CPR

I'm all set: I took a CPR course three or four years ago.

  • It's not your memory that will let you down - it's the fact that CPR has changed a lot in the past few years, and it's probably going to change on October 18th this year.
  • Bystander CPR courses are available from the American Red Cross, from the American Heart Association in kit form, and in some locations from SLICC.org. (If you want to get a SLICC.org operation going in your town, we can show you how. Just contact BobT@SLICC.org .)
I'm not going to do mouth-to-mouth on some stranger!

  • First of all, the vast majority of witnessed arrest victims are family members, friends, or associates.
  • Second, if you see an adult arrest, you're not supposed to do mouth-to-mouth. The victim's chances are about 25% better if you skip the mouth-to-mouth and just pump that chest.

I'm not going to do CPR on a stranger - I'll get sued!

  • First of all, the vast majority of witnessed arrest victims are family members, friends, or associates. (Yes, it bears repeating.)
  • Second, all fifty states (plus Washington DC) have 'Good Samaritan' laws. They vary a bit in some states, but the essence is that, if you see someone arrest and if you take action without compensation and with goodness in your heart, you cannot be taken to court.

A cardiac arrest is a matter of life-or-death.

  • Many people wish it were. It's really a matter of life or death or something worse. If all you do is call 911, the victim has a 1 in 20 chance of surviving with major brain functions intact.
  • What about the other 19? Some of them - the lucky ones - die.
  • The rest spend the rest of their lives with neurological deficits that interfere with some or all of the activities of normal daily life - activities such as walking, talking, speaking, hearing, seeing, bladder and bowel control.
  • Starting chest compressions immediately after calling 911 will increase the number who survive and will decrease the number that don't survive but also don't die.

I can't do CPR on someone - I might break a rib.

  • Think about it - what's better for the victim? Alive with broken ribs? ...or dead with ribs intact.
  • It does happen, and the odds of it happening increase with the age of the victim. You can minimize the chance of ribs breaking by proper hand placement.
  • If it does happen, just keep on pushing.