I took a CPR refresher course just about three weeks ago now (actually "basic life support" - same thing), and sure enough, last night I found myself in a situation where I needed it.
Not CPR, but a choking child. My 2 year old niece choked on a piece of banana last night, and I got on it right away, and managed to get it dislodged with the first few blows to the back. Fortunately, I didn't need to start chest compressions. It was a tense situation, but everything was cool afterward, although everyone was pretty rattled (it was at a party for her older brother's birthday - way to steal the limelight!).
It got me thinking what a critical skill CPR and choking responses are, and how few people get certified. It's really pretty scary.
What I also found interesting was that the CPR training these days doesn't even require breathing - just chest compressions. I think that's kind of weird. The BLS instructor I had told us it was because people, in general, find rescue breathing to be "icky" and sometimes avoid giving CPR for that reason, so they dropped the breathing requirement to try to encourage more people to respond. For BLS, we did the breathing - our instructor said it's still a good idea, to avoid brain damage from lack of oxygen to the brain.
Not CPR, but a choking child. My 2 year old niece choked on a piece of banana last night, and I got on it right away, and managed to get it dislodged with the first few blows to the back. Fortunately, I didn't need to start chest compressions. It was a tense situation, but everything was cool afterward, although everyone was pretty rattled (it was at a party for her older brother's birthday - way to steal the limelight!).
It got me thinking what a critical skill CPR and choking responses are, and how few people get certified. It's really pretty scary.
What I also found interesting was that the CPR training these days doesn't even require breathing - just chest compressions. I think that's kind of weird. The BLS instructor I had told us it was because people, in general, find rescue breathing to be "icky" and sometimes avoid giving CPR for that reason, so they dropped the breathing requirement to try to encourage more people to respond. For BLS, we did the breathing - our instructor said it's still a good idea, to avoid brain damage from lack of oxygen to the brain.
Last edited by a moderator: