CPR
CPR
CPR
Student Manual
0
Copyright 2006 by Justin Maloney, M.D.
Corporate Health Partners AstraZeneca Bristol-Myers Squibb Canada Pfizer Canada sanofi-aventis
Acknowledgments
This manual was written by Dr. Justin Maloney, Emergency Physician at the Ottawa Hospital and Medical Director of the Ottawa Base Hospital Program. Les Johnson and Sandra Clarke served as principal consultants, editors and guiding lights. Mr. Johnson is Director of Client Services for St. John Ambulance, National Branch, and a member of the Regional Heart Saver Committee. Ms. Clarke is Executive Director of the ACT Foundation, a national charitable foundation funded by companies in the research-based pharmaceutical industry: AstraZeneca, Bristol-Myers Squibb Canada, Pfizer Canada, and sanofi-aventis. ACT promotes CPR and improved prehospital care. The manual was reviewed by a battery of high school teachers and students, CPR Instructors, Instructor Trainers, and hospital and Base Hospital Program staff. The guidelines for CPR are based on guideline recommendations from the 2005 International Consensus on CPR and ECC Science with Treatment Recommendations (CoSTR). Tips to reduce fats in your diet... was borrowed from The Light-Hearted Cookbook, published by the Canadian Heart Foundation. The Chain of SurvivalTM logo is a registered trademark of the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada. Illustrations of heart and lungs were reproduced with permission of St. John Ambulance, Canada. This manual may only be reproduced with written permission from the author. 2006 Justin Maloney, M.D., c/o The Advanced Coronary Treatment (ACT) Foundation, 379 Holland Ave., Ottawa ON K1Y 0Y9 Tel.: (613) 729-3455 or (800) 465-9111; Fax: (613) 729-5837; Email: [email protected]; Web site: www.actfoundation.ca
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Reproduced with the permission of the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada, 2005. The Chain of Survival is a trade-mark of the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada.
OF CPR
THE 4 Rs
Hi There!
INTRODUCTION: CHAIN OF SURVIVAL
Welcome to the world of CPR... Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation. You are going to learn how to help someone who chokes or someone whose heart stops. CPR is the heart of any first aid program. (Sorry for the pun).
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Nitroglycerin
Many people take nitroglycerin spray when they get angina. It helps open up the circulation and relieves the pain.
Heart
Blocked coronary artery Area of damaged heart muscle
Lungs
Spine
Coronary artery
When heart muscle is suffering because it cant get oxygen, it gets irritable. (If you choke and cant get air, youll get irritable too!) The hearts main muscles, the ones around the ventricles, lose their rhythmic pumping action and may start to fibrillate. This is a squirmy kind of muscle contraction that doesnt pump blood. It is called ventricular fibrillation (because it is a ventricle and it is fibrillating). This is the most common kind of cardiac arrest. It is also the most treatable.
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What is CPR?
Starting Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation on a person whose heart has stopped, means two things: 1. Pushing on the persons chest forces blood to flow through the body. 2. Mouth-to-mouth breathing provides oxygen to the lungs.
Defibrillation
A Shocking Thing!!
When you deliver the shock and the heart stops fibrillating, you have de-fibrillated it.
What is Defibrillation?
When you call 911 and start CPR on someone, paramedics or firefighters will be there in a few minutes. They attach a small computerized device (a defibrillator) to that person. It delivers a special kind of shock to the heart, trying to kickstart it, trying to reset the heart muscle and restore its smooth pumping action. This is called defibrillation... ZAP!
WHAT IS A STROKE?
If you understand heart attacks, you can figure this out. Remember how arteries to the heart can get blocked by junk, like fat or cholesterol? The area of heart muscle that the artery nourishes suddenly receives no circulation (no blood circulating, so no oxygen) and the person experiences a heart attack. It is the same in the brain. After a lifetime of burgs and fries, an artery gets blocked up by all that cholesterol. When the area of the brain nourished by that artery has no oxygen, it gets damaged. As a result, a person may have a sudden headache, slurred speech, vision problems or sudden weakness of the face, an arm or leg. That is a stroke. Someone thought, Hmm, if it happens in the heart and we call it a heart attack why not call this a brain attack? One kind of stroke is different. Instead of getting clogged up like a usual stroke, a blood vessel bursts. You can't tell without tests at the hospital which kind of stroke it is. No matter which kind of stroke it is, you have to help in the same ways you will learn here. That part was tough. You learned about blood circulation and oxygen, about hearts that stop when they fibrillate and start when someone defibrillates them. And you learned a little about strokes or brain attacks. Now you are ready to learn the 4 Rs of CPR. Knowing them lets you make the system move when an emergency occurs. Lets tackle those 4 Rs.
PAD
Public Access Defibrillation
Look for new small easy-to-use defibrillators soon to be hanging on the walls in lots of places, just like fire extinguishers. Lifeguards, security guards, even hotel desk clerks and the waiter in your favourite restaurant are being trained to use them. Seriously! These are for the general public to use. That is how they get their name.
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THE 4 Rs OF CPR
I. Risk Factors Heart Disease and Stroke
A risk factor is something that increases the chance of heart disease or stroke. If you have several relatives who have heart trouble, you may too be at risk. This, and simply getting older, are two risk factors you cant do much about. But you can do something about most risk factors. Lets talk about these and about being Heart Healthy.
Smoking
Smoking causes lung cancer and stinky breath. It is also the leading cause of heart disease in Canada. It is the worst, most direct, very personal, kind of air pollution. Even if you dont smoke, those smokers around you are offering you second-hand air pollution. (Now which is worse, nice fresh air pollution or used stuff? Either way, this is not attractive!)
Diabetes
Diabetes affects the level of sugar and fat in your blood. It is a problem, but it can be managed. People with diabetes will do better and have fewer complications like heart trouble or stroke if they eat properly and follow their doctors instructions.
Obesity
Obesity is not good, because if you are obese, the heart has to pump harder all the time to move blood around.
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Lack of Exercise
Lack of exercise is another risk factor. Remember, your heart is a muscle. Just like other muscles in your body, it works better if you keep fit and active. Exercise makes the heart work hard and this is good.
Stress
Stress affects the body in very physical ways. If you are nervous, if your hands are shaking, you can be sure things inside of you are also being affected. If you are stressed for a long period of time, your body may break down. Heart problems can be one of the results.
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II. Recognize
Recognizing that a person is having a heart attack or stroke may be tough. If it is someone close to you, it may be even more difficult. Early Recognition means realizing someone may be having heart trouble or a stroke. You will learn the ABCs and D of that later. It means recognizing that some kinds of chest pain, weakness or choking situations may mean serious trouble. If a person is having a heart attack, there is a risk of cardiac arrest. If it is a stroke, the person may be paralyzed. The sooner the person gets to the hospital, the better the chance that things will be OK. People who choke may need help right now. If the problem is a heart attack or a stroke, doctors now have miracle drugs called thrombolytics that dissolve blood clots and other treatments that open blocked blood vessels. They reduce damage to the heart or brain but they must be given very early in order to work. You must recognize there is a problem and call 911 quickly. You can make a difference. You can help save a life!
Signals of a Heart Attack The 5 Ps Pain Pale Puffing Pooped Puking Signals of a
Stroke
Signals of a Stroke
Signals of a stroke that paramedics look for especially are sudden paralysis of the face, arm or leg, and/or sudden speech problems. Other signs of stroke include weakness, numbness, or tingling in the face, arm or leg, dizziness, and/or sudden headache.
Sudden:
Paralysis of the face, arm or leg. Speech problems.
Something else...
Dont be surprised if the person having trouble is also having some trouble accepting they might be experiencing a heart problem or stroke. You might see: Denial Im too young! It will go away with a little rest! The thought, It cant be happening to me is pretty common. Fear the person may be terrified inside and afraid to go to the hospital.
Suspect a
Stroke?
Try Asking:
Can you smile? Can you raise both arms? Can you speak a simple sentence?
Be firm. If the signals are there suggesting a heart attack or stroke, the person needs to be taken by ambulance to a hospital quickly. It is important that you Recognize that what is happening in front of you may be a real emergency. Remember the signals for heart attack and the signals for stroke and dont let yourself be paralyzed by Fear and Denial. Now lets learn how to React...
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If the Person has Chest Pain... What Do You Do? Remember: Hazards & Holler
Then... stay with your patient and offer a little PLT Position P Loosen clothing L Talk, reassure T
Alert ! Alert !
People who have been ill often wear a MedicAlert bracelet or necklace. It will often have information about the persons allergies, past medical history and medications.
So, Hazards and Holler, a little PLT, and flash the paramedics. Remember that and you know how to React when you see an emergency develop. Now lets move on to Resuscitation...
HOLD IT! Stop everything! Did they really just say you were supposed to flash the paramedics? NO! NO! They meant to say flash the lights! ...the porch lights ...the house lights ...any lights
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IV. Resuscitate
Resuscitation is as simple as ABC & D!
A B C D
Airway. Something in the mouth blocking air from getting in? Get it out of there. Breathing. Not breathing? Do mouth to mouth. Breathe for this person. Circulation. Start chest compressions to help blood circulate. Defibrillation. If you started CPR, make sure help is coming, especially someone with a defibrillator.
The purpose of CPR is to keep alive a person who has stopped breathing and who has no circulation until either the person is breathing and circulation returns, or until medical help takes over... and how do you do that? Well, you remember your ABCs, and just do what you are trained to do on the next pages!!!
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Check for hazards. Make sure there is nothing around that can hurt you (e.g. electric wires, traffic, fire, glass, gas).
Call 911 or your local EMS, or have someone call for you, if the person is not moving or does not respond.
Check for breathing for up to 10 seconds. Put your ear over the persons mouth and nose. Look at the chest for movement. Listen for the sounds of breathing. Feel for exhaled breath on your cheek.
Head-tilt Chin-lift:
Place one of your hands on the persons forehead and the fingers of your other hand under the bony part of the lower jaw near the chin. Tilt the persons head back by pushing down on the forehead. At the same time, gently lift the chin up to open the airway.
You are checking for breathing and suddenly the person takes a breath or two - a sort of gasp or sigh. Sometimes this happens, especially if a persons heart has just stopped. It will not look like normal regular breathing. The person is in cardiac arrest. Start CPR.
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Give 2 breaths* if the person is not breathing normally. Maintain the head-tilt chin-lift. Pinch the persons nose, take a normal breath and cover their mouth with your mouth (assuring a good seal at the nose and mouth). Give 2 breaths, 1 second for each breath. Watch the persons chest to make sure it rises and falls with each of your breaths. If your breaths do not go in, reposition the head to open the airway, check your seals at the mouth and nose, and try again. *Note: You are learning how to do mouth-to-mouth breathing, but some people may be nervous to do it as part of CPR. That is OK, but it is important to do something! If you are reluctant to perform mouth to mouth, just do the chest compressions. Its better to do something than nothing!
Landmark for chest compressions. Compress the lower half of the persons breastbone in the centre of the chest, between the nipples. Place the heel of your hand on the breastbone in the centre of the chest between the nipples. Place the heel of your second hand on top of the first so that your hands are overlapping and parallel. Interlock your fingers off the chest. Position your shoulders directly above the heels of your hands. Keep your arms straight, with your elbows locked in position. Your instructor will show you how.
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Give 30 compressions and 2 breaths. Give 30 compressions in a little less than 20 seconds. The ideal rate is 100 compressions in 1 minute. Compress straight down on the breastbone. Compress 4 to 5 cm (1.5 to 2 inches) at a rate of 100 compressions per minute (e.g. 5 compressions in 3 seconds). Compressions should be hard and fast.
4-5 cm
It helps if you count aloud (e.g. 1 and 2 and 3 and 4 and 5 and 1 and 2 and 3 and 4 and 10 and 1 and 2 and 3 and 4 and 15 and etc. on up to 30). Without losing contact with the chest, allow the chest to return to its normal position between compressions. Compression and relaxation times should be about equal. Find your landmark with each new cycle of compressions. Continue CPR until someone brings an Automatic External Defibrillator (AED), the person moves, or Emergency Medical Service (EMS) personnel take over.
Getting Tired?
If you get tired while doing CPR and there are others around who know how to do it, ask for someone to take over. Do your best until help arrives.
Remember...
30 and 2 30 and 2 30 and 2 is what you do
Note: If you do it right, hard enough and fast enough, your chest compressions squeeze the heart and all the big blood vessels in the chest. That is how CPR circulates blood. It only provides about 30% of normal circulation but studies show early CPR is the most important thing to save someone whose heart has stopped.
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CHOKING
When a person chokes on food or a small object that is lodged in the throat, air cannot reach the lungs. The person may die if help is not given immediately. Recognize that a person is choking by the universal distress sign of choking hands to the throat. When a person chokes, the throat or airway can be either mildly or severely blocked. A mildly blocked airway allows some air to get in. If a choking person can still speak, cough and breathe, you know the blockage is not complete. Encourage the person to cough to try to clear the obstruction themselves. With a severely blocked airway, there is no air getting in. If that person cant speak, cough and breathe, you have to React quickly. This is a serious emergency.
Holler for help. Reassure the person and explain what you are going to do. Call 911 or your local Emergency Medical Service (EMS), or have someone call for you if the person is having difficulty breathing.
Are You
Choking?
3
Give abdominal thrusts if the choking person cannot speak, cough or breathe. Stand behind the person and wrap your arms around his/her waist. Make a fist with one of your hands and place the thumb side of that fist in the belly button area, slightly above the belly button and well below where the ribs meet. Grasp your fist with your other hand and press inward and upward with a sudden forceful thrust.
Repeat abdominal thrusts in rapid sequence until either the obstruction is removed or the person becomes unconscious. When the obstruction is removed, the person should see a doctor to rule out complications from the obstruction or the abdominal thrusts.
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1 2 3
Call 911 or your local Emergency Medical Service (EMS), or have someone call for you.
Open the mouth and look for the obstruction. If you can see the obstruction, try to remove it with a hooked finger.
Open the airway using the head-tilt chin-lift, and check for breathing for up to 10 seconds. Even though you may not be able to see the obstruction, it may have loosened enough to let some air pass by it and enter the lungs.
4 5 6
Try to give a breath. If air wont go in, reposition the head, check your seals at the mouth and nose and try to give another breath.
If the chest does not rise, landmark and give 30 chest compressions. This may remove the obstruction.
Open the mouth and look for the obstruction. If you can see the obstruction, try to remove it with a hooked finger. Open the airway and attempt to ventilate again. If air still wont go in...
Repeat sequence of chest compressions, looking in the mouth, opening the airway and attempting to ventilate until you are successful, or until medical help takes over.
1 2
Check for hazards. Make sure there is nothing around that can hurt you (e.g. electric wires, traffic, fire, glass, gas).
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3 4 5
Call 911 or your local EMS, or have someone call for you if the person is not moving or does not respond.
Check for breathing for up to 10 seconds. Put your ear over the persons mouth and nose. Look at the chest for movement, listen for the sounds of breathing and feel for exhaled breath on your cheek.
Try to give a breath if the person is not breathing. If air wont go in, reposition the head, check your seals at the mouth and nose and try to give another breath. If the chest still does not rise, conclude that the airway is blocked by something.
7 8
Open the mouth and look for the obstruction. If you can see the obstruction, try to remove it with a hooked finger. Open the airway and attempt to ventilate again. If air still wont go in...
Repeat sequence of chest compressions, looking in the mouth, opening the airway and attempting to ventilate until you are successful, or until medical help takes over.
Follow-Up Care
Recovery Position
When the person starts to breathe, place him/her into the recovery position if injuries permit. The person may gag or vomit, and the recovery position will help keep the airway open and allow fluids to drain from the mouth. Monitor the breathing carefully. The person may stop breathing again. Stay with the person until medical help takes over. For information on different rescue scenarios you may encounter, as well as new information relating to the world of CPR (including guideline updates), check out ACT's Web site at www.actfoundation.ca!
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I Know
I see you falling I see you in pain I see you need help It's why I train I see you dad I see you mom Sister n' brother We help one another I know the 4 Rs I know the Chain I'll save a life It's why I train I know the Risks I Recognize I will React Resuscitate Do you know what it needs? Do you know what to do? I know what it needs I know what to do I know it, know it, know it I will do it, do it, do it Know it, do it Know it, do it
CP-R-R-R-R...
So you thought this CPR course was all about learning CPR. Well OK, that is understandable. But wait! Think of what you have learned. Think about the 4 Rs. You now know about Risk factors, that a life of burgers and fries and stinky cigarette breath can be a short one. Lots of overweight adults and parents who struggle to quit smoking would have loved to know what you know when they started out. Maybe you will never see anyone collapse. Maybe you won't ever have to do CPR. But chances are greater that you will be around someone who falls ill. You have learned to Recognize if that person might be having a heart attack or stroke. Seeing someone in your family having chest pain, looking pale and sweaty (remember your Ps) should push you to help them get to the hospital. If your dad has chest pain, he may not know about clot busters. But you do. You were not trained to be shy. Step up! React! The CPR thing is only part of this course. Resuscitate is only one of the 4 Rs. Not everyone who falls sick has a cardiac arrest, but you can still help them. The sequences of CPR are important to remember. However, it is more likely you will need to remember the 5 Ps of chest pain than how to do CPR. You need to remember Hazards and Holler and a Little PLT. You need to be Visible with Information for the paramedics. Be a champion! You have the knowledge. You know the Risks. Help others avoid trouble. But if there is trouble, you know Recognize. You know React. And yes, sometimes you will need to Resuscitate and do CPR.
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True Scene
From Life
Kasia Smetny-Sowa:
Seventeen-year-old Kasia Smetny Sowa was vacationing in Halifax when she saw a man collapse at a local tennis club. The Ottawa student rushed to his side, where a crowd was already forming. The man had no pulse and an ambulance had been called. It had been two years since Kasia had learned CPR at her high school, but she remembered what to do. She began CPR and, with help from another bystander, continued until the ambulance arrived.
You React, getting someone to look for another teacher. If there is none, you get someone to call 911. You sit Mrs. Jones down and open a window so she can get some air.
(Hazards and Holler and a little PLT)
Now that the paramedics are coming, ask Mrs. Jones about medications, allergies, etc... While you are doing that, ask someone else to go to the front door of the museum to guide the paramedics to where you are.
(Visible with Information)
2 Your allergic brother comes home from a friends house wheezing badly. He played
with a dog there and his asthma is severe. He is using his inhaler too often and not getting better. You holler for your mom, who calls 911. You reassure him help is coming. You stay right with him. You tell your mom to bag his inhalers and go to the front to wave at the paramedics as they come down the street.
(Hazards and Holler and a little PLT) (Visible with Information)
Your brother gets sicker and suddenly you realize he is very quiet. He is unresponsive and is not breathing. You are scared, but you start CPR.
(Resuscitate)
Success!
Thanks to her, 60-year-old Nick Weatherston is alive and well. And for that, his wife Pat is eternally grateful. I feel we were truly blessed by a guardian angel.
3 There is a fight in the schoolyard. A boy is down. You Recognize his airway is OK, he
is breathing. You support his neck, making sure it doesnt move.
(ABCs)
You React, yelling for someone to get a teacher and call 911.
(Hazards and Holler and a little PLT)
You send a friend to the front of the school to guide the paramedics. When the paramedics arrive, you point out the boy is wearing a MedicAlert bracelet.
(Visible with Information)
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True Scene
From Life
Mark Zablocki:
Mark was watching television in his basement when his mother called him to hurry upstairs to help his 46-year-old father Joe, who was choking. He rushed upstairs to find his father standing in the kitchen, his face red and his hands at his throat. No sound was coming from his mouth. He couldn't breathe. Despite his shock, Mark sprung into action, performing the Heimlich Manoeuvre, which he had learned in school. A piece of his father's chicken dinner shot across the room.
You React, pointing out to everyone that Granny is sick. You note this could be a stroke. Your mom calls 911 as you help carry Granny to bed.
(Hazards and Holler and a little PLT)
While your dad checks Grannys purse looking for medications, you ask your mom questions. You write the answers down for the paramedics. Your brother moves the car out of the driveway so the ambulance can get close to the house.
(Visible with Information)
5 You and your dad are alone watching TV. You suddenly notice he doesnt look
comfortable. He says he has pain, which you Recognize might be a heart problem.
(The 5 Ps of Chest Pain)
You React, urging him to call 911. You tell him you are afraid for him and you let him know about clot-busters. He says it is nothing, probably indigestion. He is sweaty and vomits. You decide to act on your own. You call 911. You help dad lie down.
(Hazards and Holler and a little PLT)
You leave him for a second to turn the porch light on so the paramedics can see the address number. You ask your dad where his medications are. When the paramedics arrive, you tell them dads medications are in the bathroom.
(Visible with Information)
6 At a party, a girl is found unconscious in the backyard pool. Someone has lifted her
to the poolside. You step up and say I know CPR. (It scares you a little that people are suddenly listening to you and doing what you say). You Recognize that this person is in cardiac arrest.
(ABCs)
And you Resuscitate, starting CPR. Be careful to support her neck, because you dont know how she fell into that pool! You tell someone to get any information about this girl. Who is she? Does she have a wallet? Does it have any medical information in it? You send someone to the street to flag down the paramedics and guide them through the house to the backyard.
(Visible with Information) (Resuscitate)
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Reproduced with the permission of the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada, 2005. The Chain of Survival is a trade-mark of the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada.
There is No
S rvival
Without u
I know CPR
I know Risks I know Recognize I know React I know Resuscitate I know CPR! I know!
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5 Should people with a possible heart attack or stroke take Aspirin (ASA)?
If a person is having chest pain that might be cardiac, doctors often try to give the patient an ASA pill. It works as a sort of blood thinner, which may limit the damage done by a heart attack. You cant substitute Tylenol. It does not help for this. Also, some patients are allergic to ASA. But if the person with pain says, ASA is no problem. I take it all the time, then OK. Just one is all thats needed. When the paramedics arrive, tell them ASA was given. Its not so clear for patients who are suffering a possible stroke. Let the paramedics decide that one.
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6 If someone has chest pain that might be a heart pain (remember the 5 Ps?) should they take Nitroglycerin?
Many patients take a medication called Nitroglycerin that helps open up those clogged blood vessels and relieves the pain of angina. If a person with a possible heart pain wants to take Nitroglycerin, help out. Check their pockets or purse. Nitro is usually in a little spray bottle. It is squirted under the persons tongue. If you see it, help the person use it.
7 When people fall down unconscious do I have to worry about their neck?
Sometimes when people collapse, they hurt their neck. Suspect a neck injury when the collapsed person has: A head injury; Fallen from a height or down stairs; Been in a motor vehicle collision; Bleeding from the mouth, ears, nose; Swelling along the neck or spine. You have learned how to assess responsiveness, the airway, breathing, and how to do mouth-to-mouth breathing. If you suspect either a head or neck injury, you must protect the head and neck from movement when you are doing these things to prevent further injury to the neck.
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Tell Us! Tell Your Teacher. Tell Your Parents to Tell Us. Yourself!
Rescued Someone?
0r... Tell Us
CLOSING NOTES...
Your teacher will give you the ACT High School CPR Program Student Course Completion Card-Heartsaver Level at the end of this program. Wondering what to do with it? Present this card when applying for a job or put it in your portfolio! Youve done a great thing by learning CPR, so dont hesitate to let others know you have the skills to save a life! Think about taking more advanced training in CPR and First Aid, and remember to take a refresher course over time!
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The ACT Foundation is a national non-profit organization that works alongside health professionals, governments and community groups in promoting health and empowering Canadians to save lives. ACT is working with local partners to implement high school CPR across Canada. ACTs corporate health partners are companies in the research-based pharmaceutical industry: