Q: Are there times when I should use conventional CPR with breaths?
A: Yes. There are many medical emergencies that cause a person to be unresponsive and to stop breathing normally. In those emergencies, CPR that includes mouth-to-mouth breathing may provide more benefit than Hands-Only™ CPR. The American Heart Association (AHA) recommends conventional CPR (CPR with a combination of breaths and compressions) for:
- All infants (up to age 1)
- Children (up to age 8)
- Adult victims who are found already unconscious and not breathing normally
- Any victims of drowning, drug overdose or collapse due to breathing problems.
Q: Is Hands-Only™ CPR as effective as conventional CPR?
A: Any attempt at CPR is better than no attempt. Hands-Only™ CPR performed by a bystander has been shown to be as effective as conventional CPR with mouth-to-mouth breaths in the first few minutes of an out-of-hospital sudden cardiac arrest. Conventional CPR may be better than Hands-Only™ CPR for certain victims, though, such as infants and children, adults who are found in cardiac arrest (whom you did not see collapse) or victims of drowning or collapse due to breathing problems.