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Do you know about CPR?

CPR (cardiopulmonary resuscitation) is a life-saving procedure that may be used in a variety of situations where someone's breathing or heartbeat has stopped, such as a heart attack or near drowning. CPR should be learnt from cpr training center and started with strong and rapid chest compressions, according to the American Heart Association. Both unskilled onlookers and first responders can use this hands-only CPR technique. Until emergency medical care can restore a normal cardiac beat, CPR can keep oxygen-rich blood flowing to the brain and other organs. Your body no longer receives oxygen-rich blood when your heart stops beating. In just a few minutes, a shortage of oxygen-rich blood can induce brain damage.

If you have learnt chest compressions and are skilled in CPR from cpr training center, do the head-tilt, chin-lift procedure to open the person's airway. Gently tilt the person's head back with your palm on his or her forehead. Then gently pull the chin forward with the other hand to open the airway. If the mouth is badly damaged or cannot be opened, rescue breathing might be mouth-to-mouth or mouth-to-nose. According to current standards, rescue breathing should be done with a bag-mask device equipped with a high-efficiency particulate air (HEPA) filter. In addition to this, remember that to give CPR to a kid, providing CPR to a child from the age of one to puberty is virtually the same as giving CPR to an adult, just follow the C-A-B procedures. CPR should not be delayed, according to the American Heart Association.

Do you know about CPR? by ST Bonner Institute | Launchora