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Your Hands Can Save a Life

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Friday, June 28, 2013   

PHOENIX – Learning Hands-Only CPR is easy, and could well put you in a position to save someone's life – possibly that of a family member.

Katie Connolly, community CPR manager for the American Heart Association, says 80 percent of sudden cardiac arrests happen away from the hospital, most likely at home.

To provide aid, she says, you need to know two simple things.

"We need them to dial 911 to start that chain of survival, which gets the EMS out to you,” she says. “And then, obviously, pushing hard and fast, which keeps the blood pumping throughout their body, which is essentially keeping their organs alive, to allow them to be back to that same person they were before they had their event."

Connolly says after you make the call to 911, "hard and fast" means pushing 100 times per minute on the center of the victim's chest.

She adds it isn't likely that a victim of sudden cardiac arrest will give any warning signs.

"Typically, someone goes into cardiac arrest for an undiagnosed problem,” she explains. “So, at any point, anyone could collapse for an unknown reason and not have any type of history whatsoever, with their own heart or within their family."

According to the American Heart Association, Hands-Only CPR has been shown to be just as effective as traditional mouth-to-mouth CPR for adult or teen victims of sudden cardiac arrest, and people are much more likely to feel comfortable using the Hands-Only method.

Connolly says some people are afraid to come to the aid of cardiac arrest victims and start pushing hard on their chest, but they shouldn't be.

"When someone needs CPR, they need CPR because they're either not breathing or their heart's not pumping correctly, which allows them not to be breathing appropriately or accurately,” she explains. “And therefore, you really can't do a whole lot more damage to them, because they're in a sense, they're dead."

To learn more about Hands-Only CPR, there's a website – HandsOnlyCPR.org.





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