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CPR Can Save Young Lives, Too
Contrary to popular belief, study finds it works on kids,
teens having heart attacks Challenging
the widespread belief that cardiac resuscitation is not
effective in young people, a new study by U.S.
researchers reports that the rescue measure is worth the
effort with children and teens who suffer cardiac arrest.
Cardiac arrest can be caused by heart disease, heart
attack, drowning, electrocution and choking.
The researchers found that children and adolescents who
had a non-traumatic, out-of-hospital cardiac arrest had
higher survival rates than adults and infants. However,
infants younger than 1 had a lower survival rate than
adults.
"Previously, if you talked to most emergency medicine
doctors and emergency medicine technicians, they would
say that children almost never survive a cardiac arrest,"
Dr. Dianne L. Atkins, a professor of pediatrics at the
University of Iowa's Carver College of Medicine and
Children's Hospital in Iowa City and lead author of the
study, said in an American Heart Association news
release. "What we showed is that children and teenagers,
in fact, do better than adults."
Atkins and her colleagues analyzed data from cardiac
arrest cases involving 25,405 adults and 624 people
younger than age 20, including 193 adolescents (ages 12
to 19), 154 children (ages 1 to 11) and 277 infants.
Among the findings:
The incidence of cardiac arrest per 100,000 person-years
was: 126.52 for adults; 6.37 for adolescents; 3.73 for
children; and 72.71 for infants.
Overall, 6.4 percent of pediatric
patients and 4.5 percent of adult patients survived to be
discharged from the hospital, a statistically significant
difference.
Survival rates among pediatric
patients were: adolescents, 8.9 percent; children, 9.1
percent; and infants, 3.3 percent.
Among pediatric patients treated by
emergency medical service personnel, the number who
survived to be discharged from the hospital were: eight
of 230 infants (3.5 percent); 14 of 135 children (10.4
percent); and 17 of 135 adolescents (12.6 percent).
The study appears in the March 9 online issue of
Circulation.
Additional therapies and resuscitation methods do need to
be developed for infants, children and adolescents to
improve their survival rates, the researchers
recommended.
"We put a lot of effort into developing better therapies
and better ways to resuscitate adults," Atkins said. "We
also need to put that same effort into children because
they actually do have a slightly higher survival."
Original at: http://www.forbes.com/feeds/hscout/2009/03/09/hscout624881.html
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