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::: CPR Facts
Effective bystander CPR, provided immediately after cardiac arrest, can
double a victims chance of survival.
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About 900 Americans die every day due to sudden cardiac arrest.
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Early CPR and defibrillation within the first 35 minutes after
collapse, plus early advanced care can result in greater than 50 percent
long-term survival rates.
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CPR facts and statistics
- About 75 percent to 80 percent of all out-of-hospital
cardiac arrests happen at home, so being trained to perform
cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) can mean the difference
between life and death for a loved one.
- Effective bystander CPR, provided immediately after cardiac
arrest, can double a victims chance of survival.
- CPR helps maintain vital blood flow to the heart and brain
and increases the amount of time that an electric shock
from a defibrillator can be effective.
- Approximately 95 percent of sudden cardiac arrest victims
die before reaching the hospital.
- Death from sudden cardiac arrest is not inevitable. If
more people knew CPR, more lives could be saved.
- Brain death starts to occur four to six minutes after
someone experiences cardiac arrest if no CPR and defibrillation
occurs during that time.
- If bystander CPR is not provided, a sudden cardiac arrest
victims chances of survival fall 7 percent to 10 percent
for every minute of delay until defibrillation. Few attempts
at resuscitation are successful if CPR and defibrillation
are not provided within minutes of collapse.
- Coronary heart disease accounts for about 450,000 of the
871,517 adults who die as a result of cardiovascular disease.
- Approximately 325,000 of all annual adult coronary heart
disease deaths in the U.S. are due to sudden cardiac arrest,
suffered outside the hospital setting and in hospital emergency
departments. About 900 Americans die every day due to sudden
cardiac arrest.
- Sudden cardiac arrest is most often caused by an abnormal
heart rhythm called ventricular fibrillation (VF). Cardiac
arrest can also occur after the onset of a heart attack
or as a result of electrocution or near-drowning.
- When sudden cardiac arrest occurs, the victim collapses,
becomes unresponsive to gentle shaking, stops normal breathing
and after two rescue breaths, still isnt breathing
normally, coughing or moving.
CPR Stats from American Heart
Association Website
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