NEW! Hands-Only CPR

We're all equipped with life saving devices

There has been a fundamental change to the standard US CPR process.

Instead of what we all grew up with, alternating chest compressions with mouth-to-mouth, the process has changed to be chest compressions only. Approximately 100 compressions per minute until a rescue team arrives.

The videos I’ve watched talk a little bit about the reason behind the change, from both a compliance standpoint and a physiologic standpoint.

From a compliance standpoint, people were too afraid of hurting the patient (and subsequent fear of a lawsuit, I’d imagine), and in this day of transmittable diseases, I would imagine there was a fear there as well. So, by not requiring mouth-to-mouth, you remove a large psychological (and legal) barrier.

From a physiologic standpoint, the reason behind the change is that there is already sufficient oxygen in the bloodstream to last at least 10 minutes, and the real issue is keeping the blood circulating (particularly to the brain). Manual chest compressions keep the blood circulating.

The underlying message: They are already dead. You can’t hurt them.

Read more, learn about the free iPhone app, and watch videos at the AHA web site.

Nail goes thru shoe, misses foot, foot still hurts

Nail through shoe I love it when stories like this come out, it is a great demonstration of how the brain controls pain and the pain response. Even though that nail looks like it went directly through this man’s foot, it did not, it went between the toes, and yet he experienced SEVERE pain, as if the nail went through the foot bed.

Although a really annoying fact of life, pain lives solely in the brain, and is a figment of our imaginations. Pain is an interpretation of what signals our nervous system receives. In this case, it certainly LOOKS as if the nail has gone through the foot, so the pain signal goes to the brain, because the body wants to get our attention that we need to do something about it. It’s the same mechanism that is behind phantom limb pain and all sorts of other body responses “that don’t make sense.”

The body desperately wants to survive and be efficient and will do whatever it takes to get our attention. Because people respond really well to pain, that is an easy mechanism for the body to use. You can think of it as the body saying, “psst, hey you, something is wrong, and I need to you to stop your busy life and take care of it.” If you ignore the signal, the pain will intensify.

It’s one of the reasons why Z-Health works so well – pain is a signal, so to get rid of the pain we need to simply change the signal in a positive manner and the pain will go away. It’s why I can mobilize a hand to make shoulder pain go away, why working on a collarbone makes a hip feel better, etc.

So, the next time you are in pain, it may be that the nail really is going through your foot, or it may be something else entirely. Just don’t take it too literally.

Chocolate, Wine, And Tea Improve Brain Performance

I love it when I find a study that helps validate the intake of my favorite foods (in moderation, of course).

In this case, according to Oxford researchers working with colleagues in Norway, chocolate, wine, coffee, and tea enhance cognitive performance.

The researchers believe it has something to do with the high amounts of polyphenols in these foods. The largest subclass of dietary polyphenols is flavonoids, which seem to result in a lower incidence of dementia.

Researchers do, of course, recommend moderation. :-)

Happy Holidays!

Link

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...