26 Minutes of compressions only, survived

Bullets

Forum Knucklehead
1,600
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Thoughts?

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20398354

I think the guy was just incredibly lucky that he was able to maintain some type of rhythm until EMS arrived, but it do like the implications that ventilations dont matter, and show that compression and electricity are the only things that actually work
 

wanderingmedic

RN, Paramedic
448
61
28
case studies are case studies....never as good as a longitudinal, cross sectional, or sequential studies.
 

Carlos Danger

Forum Deputy Chief
Premium Member
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case studies are case studies....never as good as a longitudinal, cross sectional, or sequential studies.

Not necessarily true at all.

You can learn things from individual case studies that you cannot from looking at statistics.
 

wanderingmedic

RN, Paramedic
448
61
28
Not necessarily true at all.

You can learn things from individual case studies that you cannot from looking at statistics.

Yes, agreed. However we do not change protocols or standards of care based upon case studies. Case studies are individual events, and do not validate or invalidate a practice in and of themselves.
 

18G

Paramedic
1,368
12
38
Thoughts?

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20398354

I think the guy was just incredibly lucky that he was able to maintain some type of rhythm until EMS arrived, but it do like the implications that ventilations dont matter, and show that compression and electricity are the only things that actually work

The new resuscitation protocols in Pennsylvania that go into effect July, 2013, allow the Paramedic to decide rather to use active or passive ventilation. This is pretty unheard of in EMS systems and is refreshing to see a progressive EMS system.
 

Rialaigh

Forum Asst. Chief
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The new resuscitation protocols in Pennsylvania that go into effect July, 2013, allow the Paramedic to decide rather to use active or passive ventilation. This is pretty unheard of in EMS systems and is refreshing to see a progressive EMS system.

That is awesome. I am really hoping AHA jump on board and recognize that CCCCR (continuous chest compression cardiopulmonary resuscitation) is the way to go. I think it's one of the few reactive measures that would increase survival rates greatly and hopefully increase neuro intact to discharge rates
 

DrParasite

The fire extinguisher is not just for show
6,197
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Buddy of mine is a lead paramedic instructor in Georgia. at the EMSToday conference, we got on the topic of intubations and how some states were taking that out of the paramedic scope. He told me they don't intubate cardiac arrests anymore. not even BVM.

Just put a NRB on this, and do chest compressions and defib if you can. definitely not something like what we do.
 
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