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Home Health

DAK calls for widespread CPR training to save lives

K H News Service by K H News Service
January 28, 2023
in Health
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No increase in risk of Covid with blood pressure medicines: DAK
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Srinagar: With increase in the number of sudden cardiac deaths in Kashmir valley, Doctors Association Kashmir (DAK) on Friday called for widespread cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) training that would save lives.
President DAK Dr Nisar Ul Hassan in a statement issued on Friday said “Everyone should be trained for CPR regardless whether or not they work in the medical field.”
“CPR should even be taught as a part of school curriculum so that more and more people get acquainted with this life-saving skill,” he said, adding that” CPR is an emergency life-saving technique which involves chest compressions at a rate of 100 to 120 a minute”.
Dr Hassan said people must understand that CPR is a simple but vital skill everyone should learn and then put into practice in emergency situations. “Though CPR is one of the most important life-saving techniques, unfortunately most people in Kashmir do not know how to perform CPR,” he said. “So when people experience cardiac arrest in public, in their homes or workplaces, there is simply no one around who knows how to help them.”
The DAK President said most of the cardiac arrests in Kashmir occur outside the hospitals. “And they don’t survive because they don’t receive CPR from bystanders,” he said. Dr Nisar said chances of survival in people who go into cardiac arrest increase if more people know how to administer CPR.
“In communities where widespread CPR training has been provided, survival rates from sudden cardiac arrest have been reportedly as high as 49% to 74%,” he said. “CPR is much more likely to be successful when started promptly and the victim of cardiac arrest will almost certainly die if the bystanders do not intervene immediately,” he added.

K H News Service

K H News Service

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The publication of “Kashmir Horizon” as an English daily was started with a modest attempt on May 19, 2008.It has been a Himalayan attempt for “The Kashmir Horizon” to survive the challenges posed to journalism in the violence fraught place like Jammu & Kashmir.

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