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Five Reasons CPR Will Not Save Your Life

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Podcast:Weird Worm

By: euphoriajoca

Published:August 27th, 2010

Duration:11:37

Channels:Society & Culture, Science & Medicine, Education

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CPR, or cardiopulmonary resuscitation is a technique used to save people whose heart and lungs have decided to quit by heroically mashing ones hands and face into a personrsquo;s face and chest. Itrsquo;s a hallmark medical system, right up there with the Heimlich maneuver or ldquo;Not Applying Leeches for Every Medical Ailmentrdquo;. And while it can be an important tool in the fight against the icy, relentlessly tightening grip of death, it turns out that, for a number of reasons, yoursquo;re still probably going to die. 5. Resuscitation is Poorly Understood It doesnrsquo;t take a Planned Parenthood security guard to tell you that the point at which human life begins is a little bit of a contentious issue. The point at which we can declare something to be dead is similarly fuzzy. Until the late 1700rsquo;s, we tended to go with ldquo;did he flinch when poked with a sharp stick?rdquo; line of diagnosis. This all started to change when the Dutch got sick of the stupid bastards who were clogging up their beloved canals. Lacking the necessary 1-900 psychics to ridicule people in the spirit world, they set about developing a system to revive those whorsquo;d drowned. The British soon followed with their hilariously named ldquo;Society for the Recovery of Persons Apparently Drownedrdquo; which was managed by the even more stereotypically English ldquo;Royal Humane Society for the Apparently Deadrdquo;. That is totally true, and yes, they did spend more time on politeness than legitimate medical science. [caption id="" align="aligncenter" width="400" caption="Problem solved!"][/caption] The methods they developed included bleeding by leeches (naturally), tickling the throat, variations on getting people upside-down and even literally blowing smoke up personrsquo;s rectum. Given how that last practice has passed into the common vernacular, you can imagine how well this went over. Fortunately, there was some success with two techniques: pressing down on abdomens and doing respirations. These actually caught on, though the physiology was poorly understood. For example, it took about two hundred years for people to realize that the airways needed to be clear for air to go in them. [caption id="" align="aligncenter" width="560" caption="Science, circa 1799."][/caption] Even after hundreds of years of progress, wersquo;re still trying to figure out the magic formula. There are conferences, research and symposia on the matter. And yet, the jury is still out on the basic concepts of CPR, like the ratio of compressions to breaths, or whether to slam on your fragile organs instead of your heart or even whether to administer mouth-to-mouth at all! Hopefully your would-be savior has kept up to date on the major medical journals. Also, thanks to science, wersquo;re also doing our best to generate some cutting edge or ldquo;wackyrdquo; techniques. Therapeutic hypothermia, for example, involves intentionally reducing your temperature to low levels to induce some kind of hibernation or something. Wersquo;re not totally sure, but it definitely seems pretty awesome. Not that it will do you much good unless you decide to keel over during the Iditarod. [caption id="" align="aligncenter" width="400" caption="They probably donrsquo;t even have the KFC Doubledown up there. Savages."][/caption] 4. The Education is Suspect Wersquo;ve seen it on TV, where someone suddenly flops over and theyrsquo;re unresponsive but some anonymous hero immediately jumps in with the golden phrase: ldquo;Stand back! I know CPR!rdquo;. Itrsquo;s the next best thing to having a real doctor. Or a nurse. Or an EMT. Or a firemanhellip; police officer... the point is, ldquo;guy who took a lifesaving class at the Yrdquo; is probably in the top ten. [caption id="" align="aligncenter" width="395" caption="Wersquo;d probably trust the dentist more. He deals with mouths every day. "][/caption] Oh, and lifeguard should be in there somewhere. ...

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