Selected article for: "cardiopulmonary resuscitation and cpr cardiopulmonary resuscitation"

Author: Carballo-Fazanes, Aida; Trastoy-Quintela, Javier; Rey-Noriega, Cristina; Sánchez-Rodríguez, Laura; Rodríguez-Núñez, Antonio
Title: Paediatric residents deliver similar quality simulated neonatal resuscitation using 3:1 and 15:2 ratios.
  • Cord-id: d9x274qp
  • Document date: 2021_6_18
  • ID: d9x274qp
    Snippet: About 10% of babies need assistance to start breathing at birth and around 1% need chest compressions (CC).1 However the optimal CC to ventilation ratio (CC:V) remains unclear. Current recommendation: three compressions/one ventilation (3:1), is based on consensus and expert opinions1,2 . Guidelines also state that higher ratios (15:2) can be used if the primary cause of collapse is cardiac or when arrest happen days after birth.2 Guidelines for newborns focus on resuscitation in delivery rooms,
    Document: About 10% of babies need assistance to start breathing at birth and around 1% need chest compressions (CC).1 However the optimal CC to ventilation ratio (CC:V) remains unclear. Current recommendation: three compressions/one ventilation (3:1), is based on consensus and expert opinions1,2 . Guidelines also state that higher ratios (15:2) can be used if the primary cause of collapse is cardiac or when arrest happen days after birth.2 Guidelines for newborns focus on resuscitation in delivery rooms,2 but babies may be born outside specialist environments and even have to be resuscitated by laypeople and COVID-19 pandemic has also had impact on resuscitation training. This study explored two CC:V rations (neonatal vs. paediatric). Our hypothesis was that cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) quality would be similar with 3:1 (neonatal) and 15:2 (paediatric) sequences.

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