Researchers found that women receive CPR less often than men, likely because people are not comfortable performing life-saving measures on female bodies Gabrielle Rockson is a staff writer ...
But research shows bystanders are less likely to intervene to perform CPR when that person is a woman. A recent Australian study analyzed 4,491 cardiac arrests between 2017–19 and found ...
When a heart stops beating during sudden cardiac arrest, CPR from a bystander doubles the chance of survival. However, women ...
A recent trend on social media has revived a curious technique from the late 1970s called cough CPR. A post claims that this ...
A Sterling woman's business is teaching people how to save a life, one class at a time. Stephanie McLean is a registered nurse and an American Heart Association-certified CPR and first-aid instructor ...
Per Australian research published in Resuscitation Journal in June, women suffering from cardiac arrest were less likely to receive CPR. This, therefore, meant that women were less likely to survive.