Latest Heart News

News Picture: Prepared Bystanders Save Lives When Cardiac Arrest Strikes

TUESDAY, Dec. 24, 2019 (HealthDay News) — Few Americans survive cardiac arrest when it happens outside a hospital, but if more people knew how to recognize it and do CPR the odds might be better, a new study finds.

Only about 8% of those who suffer a cardiac arrest — a sudden stoppage of the heart — survive. Simply knowing what to do and doing it can increase the chance of survival, researchers say.

Three steps can save lives:

Bystanders should start CPR whenever someone is unresponsive and not breathing normally, the AHA advises.

“For every minute that a person with out-of-hospital cardiac arrest goes without CPR and defibrillation, the chance of survival decreases by 7 to 10%,” Dr. William Brady, an emergency doctor at University of Virginia, wrote recently in the New England Journal of Medicine.

A 2010 review of more than 10,000 cardiac arrests found that 22% of patients who received bystander CPR survived, compared with 8% of those who didn’t.

And a 2018 study of more than 50,000 cardiac arrests found that 67% of patients treated with an AED by a bystander survived, compared with 43% of those whose hearts were shocked after rescue crews arrived.

To improve survival odds, more people need to be trained, especially in CPR, the researchers said. Brady estimated that only about 2% of Americans a year get CPR training.

Efforts that might get more people to start CPR early include making training sessions shorter and using smartphone apps to alert trained people to a cardiac arrest near them, he suggested.

“The next major advance in cardiac arrest management is not a new hospital-based treatment nor fire-rescue intervention. It is this pre-arrival care performed by a bystander before fire-rescue personnel arrive and long before a patient is transported to the hospital. This care can allow victims of cardiac arrest to return to their lives and families,” Brady said in a university news release.

— Steven Reinberg

MedicalNews
Copyright © 2019 HealthDay. All rights reserved.

SLIDESHOW

Heart Disease: Causes of a Heart Attack See Slideshow

References

SOURCE: University of Virginia, news release, Dec. 11, 2019