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A prospective infant manikin-based observational study of telephone-cardiopulmonary resuscitation

A prospective infant manikin-based observational study of telephone-cardiopulmonary resuscitation
A prospective infant manikin-based observational study of telephone-cardiopulmonary resuscitation
Introduction

Bystander cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) has been shown to significantly improve outcome in sudden cardiac arrest in children. In view of this, most emergency medicine services deliver telephone instructions for carrying out CPR to laypeople who call the emergency services. Little is known as to whether laypeople carrying out these instructions deliver effective CPR.

Methods

Adult volunteers who had no previous experience of CPR were recruited. They were presented with a scenario and asked to perform CPR for 3 min on a training manikin according to the instructions they were given by telephone. Tidal volume, compression rate and depth, time to the beginning of CPR and hand positioning were recorded.

Results

Fifty-five volunteers were recruited; three were excluded (two had previous CPR training and one refused to perform CPR). None of the subjects identified correctly that the manikin was not breathing and achieved a level of CPR performance that was consistent with all of the current guidelines.

Median tidal volume of rescue breaths was 38 mL. Only 23% of subjects delivered rescue breaths of optimal volume (40–50 mL) and 23% delivered no effective breaths at all. Chest compressions were performed at a median rate of 95 min?1 with 37% delivering compressions at the optimum rate of 90–110 min?1.

Conclusion

None of our volunteers performed telephone-CPR at a level consistent with current guidelines. Further investigation is necessary to determine whether the instructions can be improved to optimise CPR performance.
cardiac arrest, ambulance, pre-hospital, telephone, bystander, paediatric
0300-9572
63-68
Dawkins, S.
96a2154c-afef-4107-b7f3-f933b7603fe8
Deakin, C.D.
560d993b-bbc9-4548-9990-272ed18a011d
Baker, K.
83be874c-d2b2-4c65-96e7-990f056dd2a7
Cheung, S.
bb03c00e-0b14-4b45-8a3f-1129aeb8ec2a
Petley, G.W.
4f2da40b-3c7b-4adc-b75c-e24e62bb1cf0
Clewlow, F.
06b8840f-4ccd-48cc-9a1e-d89f4960960d
Dawkins, S.
96a2154c-afef-4107-b7f3-f933b7603fe8
Deakin, C.D.
560d993b-bbc9-4548-9990-272ed18a011d
Baker, K.
83be874c-d2b2-4c65-96e7-990f056dd2a7
Cheung, S.
bb03c00e-0b14-4b45-8a3f-1129aeb8ec2a
Petley, G.W.
4f2da40b-3c7b-4adc-b75c-e24e62bb1cf0
Clewlow, F.
06b8840f-4ccd-48cc-9a1e-d89f4960960d

Dawkins, S., Deakin, C.D., Baker, K., Cheung, S., Petley, G.W. and Clewlow, F. (2008) A prospective infant manikin-based observational study of telephone-cardiopulmonary resuscitation. Resuscitation, 76 (1), 63-68. (doi:10.1016/j.resuscitation.2007.06.012). (PMID:17689000)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Introduction

Bystander cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) has been shown to significantly improve outcome in sudden cardiac arrest in children. In view of this, most emergency medicine services deliver telephone instructions for carrying out CPR to laypeople who call the emergency services. Little is known as to whether laypeople carrying out these instructions deliver effective CPR.

Methods

Adult volunteers who had no previous experience of CPR were recruited. They were presented with a scenario and asked to perform CPR for 3 min on a training manikin according to the instructions they were given by telephone. Tidal volume, compression rate and depth, time to the beginning of CPR and hand positioning were recorded.

Results

Fifty-five volunteers were recruited; three were excluded (two had previous CPR training and one refused to perform CPR). None of the subjects identified correctly that the manikin was not breathing and achieved a level of CPR performance that was consistent with all of the current guidelines.

Median tidal volume of rescue breaths was 38 mL. Only 23% of subjects delivered rescue breaths of optimal volume (40–50 mL) and 23% delivered no effective breaths at all. Chest compressions were performed at a median rate of 95 min?1 with 37% delivering compressions at the optimum rate of 90–110 min?1.

Conclusion

None of our volunteers performed telephone-CPR at a level consistent with current guidelines. Further investigation is necessary to determine whether the instructions can be improved to optimise CPR performance.

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More information

Published date: January 2008
Keywords: cardiac arrest, ambulance, pre-hospital, telephone, bystander, paediatric
Organisations: Faculty of Health Sciences, Clinical & Experimental Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 383365
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/383365
ISSN: 0300-9572
PURE UUID: 628fbbe3-7623-4b56-bc44-090ef89cd3b7
ORCID for G.W. Petley: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3295-0444

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 28 Oct 2015 14:54
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 02:53

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Contributors

Author: S. Dawkins
Author: C.D. Deakin
Author: K. Baker
Author: S. Cheung
Author: G.W. Petley ORCID iD
Author: F. Clewlow

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