Text Only
Search Special English

Chest Compressions May Be Most Important Part of CPR

27 March 2007
MP3 - Download Audio audio clip
Listen to MP3 audio clip
Listen in RealAudio audio clip

This is the VOA Special English Health Report.

Chest compressions on a CPR training dummy
Cardiopulmonary resuscitation, or CPR, can save the life of someone whose heart has stopped.  The condition is called cardiac arrest. The heart stops pumping blood.  The person stops breathing. Without lifesaving measures, the brain starts to die within four to six minutes.  

CPR combines breathing into the victim's mouth and repeated presses on the chest.  CPR keeps blood and oxygen flowing to the heart and brain. 

However, a new Japanese study questions the usefulness of mouth-to-mouth breathing. 

The study was published in the British medical magazine, The Lancet.  Doctors in Tokyo led the research.  It examined more than four thousand people who had suffered cardiac arrest.  In all the cases, witnesses saw the event happen.

More than one thousand of the victims received some kind of medical assistance from witnesses.  Seven hundred and twelve received CPR.  Four hundred and thirty-nine received chest presses only.  No mouth-to-mouth rescue breaths were given to them.

The researchers say any kind of CPR improved chances of the patient's survival.  But, they said those people treated with only chest presses suffered less brain damage. Twenty-two percent survived with good brain ability.  Only ten percent of the victims treated with traditional CPR survived with good brain ability.

The American Heart Association changed its guidelines for CPR chest presses in two thousand five.  It said people should increase the number of chest presses from fifteen to thirty for every two breaths given. 

Gordon Ewy is a heart doctor at the University of Arizona College of Medicine in Tucson.  He wrote a report that appeared with the study. Doctor Ewy thinks the CPR guidelines should be changed again. He said the heart association should remove rescue breaths from the guidelines. 

He argues that more witnesses to cardiac arrests would provide treatment if rescue breaths are not a part of CPR.  He says this would save lives.  Studies show that many people do not want to perform mouth-to-mouth breathing on a stranger for fear of getting a disease.

Cardiac arrest kills more than three hundred thousand people in the United States every year.  The American Heart Association says about ninety-five percent of victims die before they get to a medical center. 

And that's the VOA Special English Health Report, written by Caty Weaver. I’m Bob Doughty.

emailme.gif E-mail this article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version

  Featured Story
More US Parents Think Beyond Most Popular Names for Babies  Audio Clip Available

  More Stories
How to Do It: Making Paper by Hand
On Words and Their Stories: Fireworks: What Is All the Noise About?  Audio Clip Available
Michael Jackson, 1958-2009: He Amazed the World With His Music and Dancing  Audio Clip Available
China Delays Plan for Web-Blocking Software on New Computers  Audio Clip Available
Short Story: 'The Californian's Tale' by Mark Twain  Audio Clip Available
Folklife Festival Takes Visitors to the Ancient Country of Wales  Audio Clip Available
White Firefighters Win Closely-Watched Employment Case  Audio Clip Available
Studying in the US: Foreign Graduates and Jobs  Audio Clip Available
American History Series: A Failed Attempt to Raise a Rebel Army of Slaves  Audio Clip Available
Race to the Moon: Gemini 6 and 7 Meet High Above Earth in 1965  Audio Clip Available
An 1859 Battle in Italy, and the Birth of the Red Cross  Audio Clip Available
Working to Improve the Condition of Everglades National Park  Audio Clip Available
In the Garden, Making the Most of Mulch  Audio Clip Available
Celebrating July Fourth at the Statue of Liberty  Audio Clip Available
US Students Bring Honey Project to Ghana  Audio Clip Available