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#33
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01-24-2025, 06:46 PM
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| My Rank: STAFF SERGEANT Poster Rank:836 Join Date: Jun 2017 Posts: 917 Mentioned: 1 Post(s) Quoted: 288 Post(s)
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Re: Trying to Revive Woman Who Died After Liposuction Procedure
and someone stands there, taking a video?? A bit of a HIPAA violation.
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#36
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01-25-2025, 05:15 PM
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Re: Trying to Revive Woman Who Died After Liposuction Procedure
Well its about 50% too fast, but relative to what we normally see on the site - yes I'd describe it as proper CPR. But since you seem to want to showcase your knowledge, please go ahead and describe all the deficiencies in it so we can all be impressed. |
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#38
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01-25-2025, 09:57 PM
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Re: Trying to Revive Woman Who Died After Liposuction Procedure
>on the site Ah, so we work in different contexts. It's good CPR compared to the general public... but if anybody was doing compressions like those during our inpatient codes, they'd be replaced and only trusted with flushes. |
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#39
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01-25-2025, 11:24 PM
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Re: Trying to Revive Woman Who Died After Liposuction Procedure
Who cares what you do for a living? And who cares what you know? Why do you feel the need to point that out? If you want to opine that the CPR was poor in various ways, then that's great - it is actually possible for you to do that without making the focus what you know and what you do for a living. You should have been criticizing the rate because, on my rough count, its about 50% too fast - and basic common sense tells us that a high rate is going to affect vertical travel of the chest. That is why I responded to your post in that way. Look around. This is not a medical site populated primarily by medical professionals. It is a gore site frequented by members of the public. If you are only realizing that now then you don't seem to have been paying attention. I'm not a medical expert in any way and my knowledge of CPR extends only to the usual workplace courses. I'm interested in reading comments by more knowledgeable people because I might learn something. But not if said knowledgeable people just want to make sure we know they are knowledgeable and/or can't communicate at the level of the general public. |
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#40
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01-26-2025, 10:05 AM
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Re: Trying to Revive Woman Who Died After Liposuction Procedure
>who cares what you know >I'm interested in reading comments my more knowledgeable people. Pick one. I don't know if you're intentionally being inflammatory or just dense, but I'll elaborate a bit on good faith. >You should have been criticizing the rate. I chose not to because I didn't want to write an essay on everything wrong with the CPR demonstrated in the video. You ever see a situation with so many things wrong about it that you don't even know where to start? That's how I saw it. But if you're genuinely curious, I'll summarize main problems I noticed: too fast, too deep, not allowing for full chest recoil, and not having the sense to put a backboard behind the patient. The mattress was getting better CPR than the patient. |