Part 13: Pediatric Basic Life Support 2010 American Heart Association Guidelines for Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation and Emergency Cardiovascular Care
Authors
Publication date
3 September 2016
Publisher
Abstract
For best survival and quality of life, pediatric basic lifesupport (BLS) should be part of a community effort that includes prevention, early cardiopulmonary resuscita-tion (CPR), prompt access to the emergency response system, and rapid pediatric advanced life support (PALS), followed by integrated post – cardiac arrest care. These 5 links form the American Heart Association (AHA) pedi-atric Chain of Survival (Figure 1), the first 3 links of which constitute pediatric BLS. Rapid and effective bystander CPR can be associated with successful return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) and neurologically intact survival in children following out-of-hospital cardiac arrest.1–3 Bystander resuscitation may have the greatest impact for out-of-hospital respira-tory arrest,4 because survival rates 70 % have been reported with good neurologic outcome.5,6 Bystander re
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