Detailed in the new guideline update: Anyone removed from the water without showing signs of normal breathing or consciousness should be presumed to be in cardiac arrest. Rescuers should immediately ...
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 ...
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 ...