Adults were more likely to survive cardiac arrest if a bystander gave them continuous chest compressions instead of traditional CPR with mouth-to-mouth breathing, according to a new study in Journal of the American Medical Association. It is the first large American study to examine the effectiveness of Hands-Only CPR.
"I'm excited about the results," said American Heart Association spokesperson and Ohio You're the Cure advocate Dr. Michael Sayre. "They show that simplifying the instructions for CPR and informing the public can help save lives."
The American Heart Association began advocating Hands-Only CPR in 2008 when the Emergency Cardiovascular Care Committee published a science advisory in Circulation.
Read the full study here.
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