Slightly off-topic, but I'd like to clear up any confusion or misinformation . . .
When you get a chance, please call the National Institute of Health (301/496-4000) and let them know that they're wrong too. "Time is very important when an unconscious person is not breathing. Permanent brain damage begins after only 4 minutes without oxygen, and death can occur as soon as 4 - 6 minutes later." (CPR - adult: MedlinePlus Medical Encyclopedia)
You either didn't read or didn't understand what I wrote. So let me try again.
I wasn't referring to how long CPR went on for. I was referring to how long it was before it STARTED. According to NIH (and others), if you don't START within 4-6 minutes of the person going unconscious and the heart stopping, permanent brain damage can begin to occur. This is wholly different from how long you go ONCE YOU'VE STARTED. Once you begin CPR, even if they're unconscious, you're hopefully getting blood moving again and I have no doubt that people come back after lengthy CPR sessions.
Which is exactly what I said. (And when not shocking, or after it shocks, the one I train on does say, "Continue CPR.")
I disagree with your dismissal of the potential value of the AED. Yes, you pause and stop CPR while the AED is analyzing. But it may determine that it will shock. You seem to be essentially saying the AED's value diminishes because it makes you stop CPR (which is admittedly valuable) briefly but then it may not shiock. And you seem to feel that if it's not going to shock, the CPR stoppage was detrimental. But you won't know if a shock is needed unless you let the AED do it's thing and in cases where it can and will shock, that will likely be more valuable than CPR alone.
i am not going to get in an argument with you. I was simply trying to offer advice based on 15 years of pre hospital medicine and involvement in hundreds of cardiac arrest events.
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