Editor’s note: This post marks the second in a series of posts outlining the evidence surrounding various aspects of CPR by Dr. Stu Netherton. Follow along as he covers Rate of Compression, Depth of Compression, Chest Wall Recoil, Minimizing Interruptions, and Avoiding Excessive Ventilation. To guide the depth of our compressions during CPR, the 2015
PDF) Mechanical Chest Compression Devices: Historical Evolution, Classification and Current Practices, A Short Review
CPR Reference Sheet Cpr Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation Cpr Cheat Sheet Cpr Instructor Tool Cpr Flyer
PDF) The Effect of a Mechanical Compression Device and Supraglottic Airway on Flow Time: A Simulation Study of Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest in a High-Rise Building
Part 14: Pediatric Advanced Life Support
Compression depth measured by accelerometer vs. outcome in patients with out-of-hospital cardiac arrest - Resuscitation
CARDIOPULMONARY RESUSCITATION (CPR) - PART 2
CPR Update Series Part 5 – Avoiding excessive ventilation - CanadiEM
Autonomous Bag-valve mask as a substitution for the second lifeguard in CPR Procedures - Future Science Leaders
Red Cross Blended Learning First Aid/CPR/AED Program
Defibtech Lifeline ARM
CPR Update Part 1 – Rate of Compression - CanadiEM
Left ventricle chest compression improves ETCO2, blood pressure, and cerebral blood velocity in a swine model of cardiac arrest and cardiopulmonary resuscitation - ScienceDirect
Zoll AED Plus + AED Cover - Deployment Package