This question is posted to doctors, medics, emt's, etc...
First, I'm trained in CPR and rescue techniques. I was taught surface rescue breaths.
My question is about inwater and surface rescue of an unconscience diver using higher than 17% O2 from a back gas, stage, or deco bottle via the regulator's 2nd stage. In your professional opinions (no armchair quarterbacks please for obvious reasons), does this technique have merrit?
I was reading today about this technique. According to the text, it has advantages and disadvantages. The advantage being the ability to deliver greater than 17% O2(our exhaled breath), and the disadvantage being the possibility of overexpansion injury due to high delivery pressure.
I'm guessing it would be used when 1. there will be an extended inwater surface time before getting the victim onto the boat where elevated O2 % would be helpful in restoring breathing, or 2. surface conditions are rough enough to make mouth to mouth dificult if not impossible.
I ask this based on scenarios where dive profiles make nitrox or O2 mixes available to the rescuer, and 100% O2 will be available once the victim is stabalized on the boat.
First, I'm trained in CPR and rescue techniques. I was taught surface rescue breaths.
My question is about inwater and surface rescue of an unconscience diver using higher than 17% O2 from a back gas, stage, or deco bottle via the regulator's 2nd stage. In your professional opinions (no armchair quarterbacks please for obvious reasons), does this technique have merrit?
I was reading today about this technique. According to the text, it has advantages and disadvantages. The advantage being the ability to deliver greater than 17% O2(our exhaled breath), and the disadvantage being the possibility of overexpansion injury due to high delivery pressure.
I'm guessing it would be used when 1. there will be an extended inwater surface time before getting the victim onto the boat where elevated O2 % would be helpful in restoring breathing, or 2. surface conditions are rough enough to make mouth to mouth dificult if not impossible.
I ask this based on scenarios where dive profiles make nitrox or O2 mixes available to the rescuer, and 100% O2 will be available once the victim is stabalized on the boat.