I'll agree with you on that, Lynne, but this was obvious artifact, not fine Vfib. The doc agreed with me when he put his glasses on. 

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catherine96821:Maybe it was discussed already...any problems with wet boats and saline? (AED)
ArcticDiver:I asked the question about Manual vs. Automatic Defibrilation because the machines will do it either way. One philosophy I've heard expressed is that since in a Code you are really only looking for some pretty clear rhythms that the machine can probably do just as good a job detecting why not let the machine to it? It would certainly help with the task loading.l
Are the people upon whom AEDs are used getting the short end of the stick? Or, are people making mistakes when doing manual defibrillation that could be avoided by using he machine? Is there any analytical information out there to support either belief?
Of course none of this goes to the heart of the question: "Should I attempt rescusitation?" The answer to that is a matter of local protocol and personal beliefs. Opinions about that make an interesting but hardly fruitful discussion.
Wildcard:So Im still not seing anything that is going to make me start pumping again after defib when it converts to a viable rythem with a pulse, which is exactly what is being taught. If I have a pulse, Im not doing compressions. My paperwork may say otherwise.
Wildcard:They are guidelines, sometimes we must waver from these guidelines in the best intrest of the pt. If I convert to a viable rythem with a pulse and pressure,Im NOT going to do compressions on top of it. No one questions statements like Dfib comverted to ST with strong radial pulses.... Im not going to say I refuse to do compressions on top of that. I just wont do it. Not falsified in any way. BTW welcome to the board, nice way to jump in.