The effect of 10-min dispatch-assisted cardiopulmonary resuscitation training: a randomized simulation pilot study

International Journal of Emergency Medicine
Hidetada FukushimaFrancesco Bolstad

Abstract

Immediate bystander cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) is essential for survival from sudden cardiac arrest (CA). Current CPR guidelines recommend that dispatchers assist lay rescuers performing CPR (dispatch-assisted CPR (DACPR)), which can double the frequency of bystander CPR. Laypersons, however, are not familiar with receiving CPR instructions from dispatchers. DACPR training can be beneficial for lay rescuers, but this has not yet been validated. The aim of this study was to determine the effectiveness of simple DACPR training for lay rescuers. We conducted a DACPR simulation pilot study. Participants who were non-health care professionals with no CPR training within 1 year prior to this study were recruited from Nara Medical University Hospital. The participants were randomly assigned to one of the two 90-min adult basic life support (BLS) training course groups: DACPR group (standard adult BLS training plus an additional 10-min DACPR training) or Standard group (standard adult BLS training only). In the DACPR group, participants practiced DACPR through role-playing of a dispatcher and an emergency caller. Six months after the training, all subjects were asked to perform a 2-min CPR simulation under instructions given b...Continue Reading

References

Sep 25, 2008·JAMA : the Journal of the American Medical Association·Graham NicholUNKNOWN Resuscitation Outcomes Consortium Investigators
May 20, 2009·Current Opinion in Critical Care·Ken Nagao
Feb 4, 2010·Circulation. Cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes·Comilla SassonArthur L Kellermann
Jan 26, 2018·Simulation in Healthcare : Journal of the Society for Simulation in Healthcare·Tae Han KimTonje Søraas Birkenes

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Citations

Jun 8, 2021·Notfall & Rettungsmedizin·Spyros D MentzelopoulosLeo Bossaert

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DACPR

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