Students at Virginia Commonwealth University are taking part in a new hands-only CPR training experience inside the VCU Student Commons, thanks to the installation of the state's first Mobile CPR ...
Football fans can learn how to save a life during this year's Super Bowl Experience. The American Heart Association's Nation of Lifesavers(TM) Mobile CPR Unit will be on site at the National Football ...
Scripted television often shows CPR performed incorrectly. This can affect how the public responds to emergency situations, ...
Most people who suffer cardiac arrest outside a hospital don't survive often because they don't receive CPR, according to the American Heart ...
You’ve seen what a cardiac arrest looks like on television - the patient limp and pale, the alert lifesaver pounding their ...
American TV episodes continued to depict bystander CPR with pulse checks and breaths given alongside compression, a study found. This despite hands-only CPR being the official method endorsed by the ...
Scripted television shows fail to accurately portray the realities of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) and often depict out-of-date practices for compression-only cardiopulmonary resuscitation ...
Please provide your email address to receive an email when new articles are posted on . Bystander CPR as depicted on TV frequently did not align with correct real-world procedures and experience.
More than 800 Grand Rapids Public Schools students will learn hands-only CPR this year with the help of new kits provided by ...
University of Pittsburgh researchers analyzing 169 scripted TV episodes found inaccurate CPR depictions are common, ...
Most dramas show characters searching for pulse and giving breaths but experts say chest compressions on their own can save lives Cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) is a dramatic intervention, but ...
New research highlights the disparities between TV depictions of CPR and real-world data regarding the method, age and ...