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Cardio-Pulmonary Resuscitation (CPR)


According to the World Health organization, coronary heart disease accounts for approximately 17 million deaths annually throughout the world.

What is CPR?
Risk Factors
Signs and Symptoms of Heart Attack
Facts
Where you can learn CPR

If you would like a FREE CPR Awareness video, which contains demonstrations for Adult, Child and Infant CPR in both English and Spanish, you can pick one up at our District offices.


What is CPR?

It is the artificial method of circulating blood and oxygen through a body and attempting to keep the brain alive. CPR does work. When initiated within four minutes, the survival rate is 43 percent. When initiated within four to eight minutes, the survival rate is ten percent.

Why Learn CPR?

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Risk Factors

Factors that cannot be changed:

Factors that can be changed:

Other factors

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Signs and Symptoms of Heart Attack

  1. Chest pain - can be an uncomfortable pressure, tightness or feeling of indigestion, heavy squeezing pain like a weight on the chest, can radiate to left arm and neck
  2. Nausea/vomiting
  3. Shortness of breath
  4. Pale, sweaty cold skin
  5. May have no signs or symptoms (silent Myocardial infarction)

Actions for survival

  1. Recognize signals
  2. Stop activity, rest, lay down
  3. If pain lasts more than two minutes, call for help
  4. Patient's having early signs often deny having a heart attack
  5. Be prepared to do CPR, if alone do CPR for one minute, then call 9-1-1.

Four reasons to stop CPR

  1. Patient is revived
  2. You are relieved by another trained individual
  3. Become exhausted
  4. Doctor is present and pronounces death

Prevention

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Facts

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Good Samaritan Act - Article 4 ARS.#32-1471

Health care providers and other persons administering emergency aid are not liable. Any health care provider licensed or certified to practice as such in this state or elsewhere or any other person who renders emergency care at a public gathering or at a scene of an emergency occurence gratuitously and in good faith, shall not be liable for any civil or other damages as the result of any act or omission by which person rendering the emergency care, or as the result of any act or failure to act to provide or arrange for further medical treatment or care for the injured persons, unless such person, while rendering such care, is guilty of gross negligence.

If you are interested in learning CPR, call:

United Phoenix Firefighters Local #493 - 602-277-1500

American Heart Association - 1-800-242-8721

American Red Cross - 602-336-6490

Arizona Chapter National Safety Council: First Aid & CPR - 602-234-1698

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Last Modified on 01/30/2007 15:57:02