Post AwmtLYaOJnCbAgAQHg by onekind@beige.party
(DIR) More posts by onekind@beige.party
(DIR) Post #AwmtLXLSvnfXK6AzNg by datasaurus@mastodon.social
2025-08-03T05:57:41Z
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When I first learned #CPR a few decades ago, there were a lot of caveats. But since then, studies have shown that the details aren't super important.Nowadays, the golden rule for CPR is: Just Do It. Not sure if they have a pulse? Start CPR anyways; you won't hurt anything.Don't want to put your mouth on theirs? Hands-only CPR is still super effective.Can't remember how many compressions-to-breaths, or other details? Just start doing something, anything, and it'll be a *huge* help.1/2
(DIR) Post #AwmtLYaOJnCbAgAQHg by onekind@beige.party
2025-08-03T07:48:23Z
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@datasaurus What's the success rate of CPR?
(DIR) Post #AwmtLZdyNxf4S4qnVQ by tregeagle@mastodon.sdf.org
2025-08-03T08:50:34Z
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@onekind @datasaurus 10 percent for out-of-hospital incidences and 21 percent for in-hospital eventshttps://www.redcross.org/take-a-class/resources/articles/cpr-facts-and-statistics
(DIR) Post #AwmtLceRCgodmO5i9A by datasaurus@mastodon.social
2025-08-03T06:04:07Z
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Yes, ideally you should take a CPR class every now and again to keep up your skills. Better CPR is better. But 911 operators will talk kids through a simplified version and it still saves a lot of lives. I just took a Wilderness First Aid class, and we learned all the details for adults and kids and infants, one rescuer or two or multiple, etc. I really appreciated that our instructors stepped back and reminded us not to get bogged down in the details. Above all else, Just Do It.2/2
(DIR) Post #AwmuVQKVy8BCPp0fBY by onekind@beige.party
2025-08-03T09:03:39Z
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@tregeagle That's a survival to discharge rate — survival to hospital is likely to be higher but I can't see it quoted.Nonetheless something like 90% of people who get CPR will still die — it's not the wildly effective intervention it is claimed to be. It is important to do CPR to give people every possible chance to survive. But @datasaurus refers to 'studies' and I'm asking 'which studies?' Who's reporting better outcomes?