CPR- no mouth needed!
October 24, 2008 by Kendra James, RN
Filed under Diseases & Conditions
* Chest compression alone nearly doubled the chances of a good neurological outcome in patients at greatest risk (those that stopped breathing, which accounted for 90 percent of those in the study).
* The good outcomes were most likely if the rescue attempt began within four minutes of the collapse.
* Mouth-to-mouth ventilation provided no real benefit.
* Those given compressions alone survived as often as those given traditional CPR (chest compressions plus rescue breaths).
What do you think about this? This follows new research that shows mouth to mouth is not necessary for survival of cardiac arrest. This was studied due to the …read more
New Approach to CPR Eliminates The Need For Mouth to Mouth
June 12, 2007 by Kendra James, RN
Filed under Diseases & Conditions
* Chest compression alone nearly doubled the chances of a good neurological outcome in patients at greatest risk (those that stopped breathing, which accounted for 90 percent of those in the study).
* The good outcomes were most likely if the rescue attempt began within four minutes of the collapse.
* Mouth-to-mouth ventilation provided no real benefit.
* Those given compressions alone survived as often as those given traditional CPR (chest compressions plus rescue breaths).
What do you think about this? This follows new research that shows mouth to mouth is not necessary for survival of cardiac arrest. This was studied due to the …read more




