Public Access Defibrillation

In public access defibrillation, automated external defibrillators are placed in busy public places such as malls and office buildings or in hard-to-reach locations such as ships and aircraft. The idea is to be able to attempt to restart the heart of a person after a cardiac arrest as soon as possible. This is made possible by the microprocessor-controlled operation of automated external defibrillators. All automated external defibrillators approved for use in the U.S. use a synthesized voice to prompt users through each step. Most units today are designed for use by non-medical operators. Experts agree that public access defibrillation has the potential to be the single greatest advance in the treatment of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest since the invention of CPR.

Procedure

Defibrillation is the "D" part on the "ABCD" life-saving sequence (Airways, Breath, Circulation, Defibrillation. See CPR) Defibrillation is an electric shock which re-initialises the cells of the heart and allows cardiac nervous pulsations to re-take control of the heart and restart normal heart beats. Modern semi-automatic defibrillators can monitor a patient's heart and decide whether a shock is recommended or not. They can be used over a pacemaker. The system is very safe and can be used by trained non-professional personnel. Defibrillation is an essential part of the CPR: survival chances of a fibrillating patient start at 90% if defibrillated immediately, and decrease by 10% every minute. Defibrillation operations start by removing all metallic parts of the patient (jewelery, nipple piercings, etc.), shaving the breasts of exceptionally hairy patients, and placing defibrillation patches: one on the left side, under the heart, and the other over the right breast. The defibrillator will then start monitoring the patient to determine whether a shock is appropriate. CPR must be stopped for the examination. In all cases, defibrillation has a priority on CPR. If the defibrillator advises a shock, the operator will shout "Warning, shocking! Clear!" while waving his hand all over the patient. Touching the patient is dangerous when the shock is administrated. If all is clear, the shock is administrated by pressing the appropriate button. Do not shock if
  • The patient is close to explosive or inflammable material.
  • The patient is wet.
If necessary, protect the patient from water and dry him, or displace the patient a few meters between each CPR cycle until the area is safe for defibrillation. Defibrillators can also be used for monitoring and recording purpose only; a different set of patches is available (two or three small round patches). Should fibrillation occur when the monitoring patches are on, the defibrillator will ask the operator to change patches.

External links

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
communication with submarines
january jones
tennesseans for fair taxation
princess of wales's royal regiment
.pl
bromham, bedfordshire
international pen
westfield (town), wisconsin
elaine stritch
heather mccomb
stratford place
trial of the sixteen
frost (mortal kombat character)
hilarie burton
stefie shock
east portlemouth
philippe barrs
evening star
fujin
kingsbridge estuary
barbarians at the gate (movie)
vagit alekperov
big top pee wee
list of government delegates at home
br standard class 9f
ian richardson
vladimir bogdanov
france national rugby league team
vladimir potanin
rem viakhirev
autistic community
richard d. zanuck
asia times online
joanna monro
david brown (producer)
johann christian gottlieb ackermann
papaveraceae
alexander smolensky
mbta accessibility
autreat
vladimir vinogradov
sugar plantation system
gwr 3700 class
bosco