Willingness and obstacles of healthcare professionals to perform bystander cardiopulmonary resuscitation in China.
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2019
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Abstract
Bystander CPR (B-CPR) is crucial to increase survival of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA), and this study is performed to assess the willingness and obstacles of Chinese healthcare professionals (HCPs) to perform B-CPR on strangers, as well as the factors associated with the willingness.An internet-based questionnaire surveying demographic information, CPR training, CPR knowledge, willingness, and obstacles to perform B-CPR among 10,393 HCPs. A multivariate logistic regression analysis was used to evaluate the factors associated with the willingness.Here, 73.9% of HCPs were willing to perform B-CPR on strangers in China. The factors associated with the willingness were as follows: female, senior, working in Third-class hospitals, working in Pre-hospital emergency and Cardiology or Cardiac surgery, receiving current training, having adequate CPR knowledge. The main obstacles were fear of infection via mouth-to-mouth ventilations (MMV), fear of being blackmailed and fear of legal liability.About three quarters of HCPs are willing to perform B-CPR. Female HCPs, those who have more CPR experience, adequate knowledge, and recent training are more likely to perform B-CPR. Reform of the legal and credit system are needed, and recommendation of hands-only CPR is a possibility to encourage HCPs to perform B-CPR on strangers.
| Reference Key |
zhou2019willingnessinternational
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| Authors | Zhou, Guozhong;Lu, Guangbing;Shi, Oumin;Li, Xuemei;Wang, Zhenzhou;Wang, Yan;Luo, Qingyi; |
| Journal | International emergency nursing |
| Year | 2019 |
| DOI |
S1755-599X(19)30074-6
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| URL | |
| Keywords | Keywords not found |
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