ANNOUNCER:
CPR - or cardio pulmonary resucitation – involves breathing for a person and compressing the chest to keep oxygen-rich blood flowing to the heart, lungs and brain until professional help arrives.
SCOTT CARUTHERS, CPR INSTRUCTOR :
As we are very well aware, response time is the critical factor. 12 to 18 minutes is the national response time average. Brain death occurs in four.
ANNOUNCER:
Even if you are trained in CPR, you may want to take a refresher course. The American Heart Association recently simplified the procedure, making it easier to learn and remember.
SCOTT CARUTHERS, CPR INSTRUCTOR :
The real primary change, I’d say, would be the change of compression-to-breath ratio, previously 15 to 2 for adults and 5 to 1 for pediatric victims. Now, it is a blanket statement of 30 to 2 for every victim.
DAVID FRYER, CPR CLASS PARTICIPANT:
I thought there would be a little more to it. But now that I know saving somebody can be that easy, maybe I’d be, you know, a little more apt to jump in and try and help somebody.
ANNOUNCER:
If he does, he could double a victim’s chance of surviving. Thanks for joining us on today’s Once Daily.