Basic Life Support (BLS) : Prepared by DR Melaku M (ECCM R-1) Moderator:dr Yonas (Assistant Professor of ECCM)
Basic Life Support (BLS) : Prepared by DR Melaku M (ECCM R-1) Moderator:dr Yonas (Assistant Professor of ECCM)
Basic Life Support (BLS) : Prepared by DR Melaku M (ECCM R-1) Moderator:dr Yonas (Assistant Professor of ECCM)
Recognize
sudden cardiac arrest (SCA) as soon as possible.
A lone responder should activate emergency services first,
then proceed to provide resuscitation.
Lay rescuers should not attempt to check for a pulse.
Instead, they should initiate CPR.
Health care providers may perform a carotid pulse check for
no longer than 10 seconds.
Perform excellent chest compressions: "push hard, push
fast.
Cont’s
Lone
responders or those untrained or uncomfortable
providing ventilation should provide compression-only CPR
Minimize interruptions in chest compressions .
Use an automated external defibrillator (AED) as soon as
one is available.
Patient survival depends primarily upon prompt recognition
of cardiac arrest, activation of emergency services, rapid
initiation of excellent CPR, and early defibrillation.
Adult Chain of Survival
The primary focus of BLS providers is the optimization
of all critical steps required to improve outcomes.
These include
• activation of the emergency response,
• provision of high-quality CPR and early defibrillation,
• ALS interventions, effective post-ROSC care.
Cont’s
Resuscitation causes, processes, and outcomes are very
different for OHCA and IHCA.
In OHCA, the care of the victim depends on
community engagement and response.
It is critical for community members to recognize
cardiac arrest, the local emergency response number,
perform CPR and use an AED.
cont’s
EMS personnel are then called to the scene, continue
resuscitation, and transport the patient for stabilization and
definitive management.
In comparison, surveillance and prevention are critical
aspects of IHCA.
When an arrest occurs in the hospital, a strong
multidisciplinary approach is involved
Outcomes from IHCA are overall superior to those from
OHCA
BLS
Pediatric chain of survival
BLS
When a patient is found unconscious or
suspected to have cardiac arrest the following
steps should be followed:
Assess scene safety
• Do not approach the patient before doing a scene size-
up.Foolish haste may subtract an emergency care
provider andadd a patient.
BLS
Determine un-responsiveness by touching and shouting
Call for help
Position the victim and start CPR
Act as a team and have a team leader that guides the
quality of the CPR and for decision making
STEPS OF BASIC CPR
Uptodate
AHA and ACLS 2020
Tintinally 9th edition
ITLS 9th edition
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