COUGH CPR
What are you to do if you have a heart attack while you are alone?
The Johnson City Medical
Center staff actually discovered this and did an in-depth study on it in our
ICU The two individuals that discovered this then did an article on it... had
it published and have even had it incorporated into ACLS and CPR classes.
It is very true and has and
does work. It is called COUGH CPR.
A cardiologist says it's the truth ... Read this...It could save your
life!
Let's say it's 6:15 p.m. and
you're driving home (alone of course), after an usually hard day on the
job. You're really tired, upset and
frustrated. Suddenly you start
experiencing severe pain in your chest that starts to radiate out into your arm
and up into your jaw. You are only about
five miles from the hospital nearest your home.
Unfortunately you don't know if you'll be able to make it that far.
What can you do? You've been trained in CPR but the guy that
taught the course didn't tell you what to do if it happened to yourself. Since many people are alone when they suffer a
heart attack, this article seemed to be in order.
Without help, the person
whose heart is beating improperly and who begins to feel faint has only about
ten seconds left before losing consciousness.
However, these victims can help themselves by coughing repeatedly and very vigorously. A deep breath
should be taken before each cough, and the cough
must be deep and prolonged, as when producing sputum from deep
inside the chest. A breath and a cough must be repeated about very two seconds
without let up until help arrives, or until the heart is felt to be beating normally again.
Deep breaths get oxygen into
the lungs and coughing movements squeeze the heart and keep the blood
circulating. The squeezing pressure on
the heart also helps it regain normal rhythm.
In this way, heart attack victims can get to a hospital. Tell as many other people as possible about
this, it could save their lives!
From Health Cares, Rochester
General Hospital via Chapter 240s newsletter "AND THE BEAT GOES ON "
(reprint from The Mended Hearts, Inc. publication, Heart Response)