(Reuters Health) - To help more patients survive cardiac arrest, traditional CPR training needs an overhaul with more chances for practice - and instructions on social and digital platforms might help ...
A study conducted by The British Heart Foundation in 2021 revealed that 38 percent of people in the UK have never undertaken cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) training. For every minute that a ...
More than a third of adults have never learnt any essential CPR skills and leading health organisations are concerned that training rates remain 'stubbornly low'. Health chiefs are using today's ...
"Without CPR training Adam wouldn't be here and it would be a very different life that we're living," Ms Dodd told Radio Manchester. "It was really important and lucky that I knew what I was doing," ...
Women are 27 per cent less likely to receive CPR from bystanders during a cardiac arrest, leading to an urgent need to address these inequalities.
One in three Britons are afraid to give women CPR because they are worried about touching their breasts, a study reveals. The same proportion of men (33 per cent) also fear being accused of ...
An army of NHS volunteers will be teaching CPR after medics used the procedure to save footballer Christian Eriksen’s life during a Euro 2020 match last weekend. It comes after St John Ambulance said ...
An estimated one in five adults in the UK witness someone collapse who needs immediate CPR, yet the majority of people do not act, according to new research funded by the British Heart Foundation (1).
Mrs Dodd said she was "one of the lucky ones", because she had been first aid-trained in her job as a primary school teacher.