Post made assuming that DrSteve is not actually an MD.
REMEMBER! CPR is to buy the patient time until ALS arrives.
DrSteve:
So on page 97 of the book it makes the following statements:
"rescue breathing is very difficult in water...and it may also force water into the lungs."
Excuse me? 6 courses so far have told me that if in doubt perform EAR (expired air resuscitation/artificial respiration). If water is in the lungs, it does need to be drained. But the air you push in will be the difference between a realistic recovery after return of consiousness and a vegetable. BSAC teaches a very effective method of performing mouth-to-nose EAR which is comparatively easy to perform in water.
OK... it depends on who you ask. If you are talking about underwater rescue breathing, I don't think anyone in their right mind would tell you to attempt that.
On the surface? It depends who you ask. EMT's are instructed that "When necessary, artifical ventilation should begin as soon as possible, even before the victim is removed from the water." On the other hand, we are also taught "Rescue before treatment." Then we are instructed to stabilize c-spine in water if there is significant MOI. SSI's booklet makes good points too.
I think you should consider your situation and determine what is best! Open airway and two rescue breaths? Probably if safely possible. Full rescue breathing? Can you safely (and I mean safe for YOU, your fellow rescuers, AND the patient) ventilate the patient in the water? Are there heavy seas? How close is the boat, shore? (20 minutes away in 75F water or 3 minutes away in 40F water?) Maybe you have to rescue breath. Will it delay you? (probably!) Can you get them out of the water without interupting rescue breathing? Rescue before Treatment. But that's just my opinion.
Water in the lungs? You do need to worry about airway obstruction by water or other. Recovery position (lateral recumbant position) if no C-spine worries will help drain the airway (not the lungs). Otherwise, follow your training to clear the airway IF OBSTRUCTED BY FOREIGN BODY. Remember, ~15% of drownings are dry (ie, upper airway swells up keeping water out, but also preventing effective rescue breathing, as the hypoxia gets bad enough they'll go unconcious and the larynx will relax and you can ventilate).
It also claims that in-water CPR should not be attempted as it can "pose the risk of forcing gastric stomach contents into the victim's lungs."
OK once again I am left wondering. First, who could perform chest compressions in water anyway? You can't even perform them on a bed. How would chest compressions cause stomach contents to go up the aesophogus and into the lungs (unless the victim just regained consciousness and threw up)?
You are right that undwater CPR is just nuts.
However, unconcious people can and do throw up.
Finally the book states that if you have to "intensify" your rescue breathing due to proximity of help/shore/boat etc., that you should breath for the non-breathing casualty every 5s. OK once again...every 5s? I am conscious and I breath once every 5s. Are they trying to tell me that an unconscious diver needs as much air as I do?
Rescue breathing, 1 breath every 5 seconds. That should be your rate for adults. I don't know what they mean by "intensify." That's only 12 breaths a second. Unless you are using a BVM or supplimental O2 (and I STRONGLY advice getting an O2 cert), it's not even like 12 normal breaths a second for the patient because you exhale 16% O2 & 3-5% CO2 instead of 21% O2 and >1% CO2 that is normally in the air we breath.
Does the unconcious non-breathing person need to breath as much as you? They are probably hypoxic among other problems. YES YES YES YES. Normal adult breathing rates are ~12-20 times a minute at rest.
(Let's face it the rate for CPR/EAR is 12-15 compressions per 2 breaths, that's slower than one every 5s) If you are attempting to tow and breath I think every 5s is near impossible. If you are stationary maybe. I seem to recall 1 breath every 10 fin strokes, meaning 1 breath every 10 s.
Like I said in the beginning, CPR is to buy the patient time until ALS arrives. 15/2 compressions/breaths is for adults and is not as efficient as the body itself. It buys time. The ratio is to balance ventilations with circulation in the most efficient manner.
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"It's what I'd do if it were me. It isn't me and neither are you."
W-EMT-B, PSD, RD