Added: 3 years ago
From: arneslet
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  • The compressions are way too slow! Resus council says you should be aiming around 100 - 120 bpm. It got to be hard not soft. CPR should have been started straight away due to the agonal breathing. You keep going with CPR until your physically exhausted and can not continue, help arrives or the pt shows signs of life. ALS sometimes your going for 45 mins to an hour so with BLS just keep going. On the other hand glad they got output again.

  • I love it how everyone are experts on here. So here is my actual expert opinion: If you have only done a First Aid course you have no idea. This is Australia where the rate is 100bpm at 30:2. There is no definite time frame in which you are suppose to cease CPR... if you are good at your job you will take into account their age, their health and the circumstance instead of solely putting a time limit on the CPR. Oh but I love how a shot of Maxalon is responsible for stabilising him haha

  • He was moving with agonal respirations. Instead of feeling for a pulse for so long, bag him! And "push hard and push fast" with those compressions, they were way too slow and weak. Overall good job but with drownings it's airway airway airway! If some one is moving their heart is probably beating.

  • FOR EVERYONE ARGUING! the correct current CPR for the UK is 30 compressions at a rate of 100-120 BPM. then 2 breaths then back to 30 compressions. the only exception is when the victim has been pulled from water in which case you give 5 breaths first then into normal process. the law is that once you start you cannot stop unil: you physically cannot go on, the patient recovers and breaths NORMALLY, professional medical help arrives and TELLS you to stop or you can be done for manslaughter!

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  • If anyone have actually tried CPR on a person, they would know that you'd get exhausted quickly. For the strength needed to compress the chest (rib-breaking is common), it is tiring!!!

  • this man was already death. I can not believe what I see, Good Job

  • That is Agonal Breathing. We were advised to watch this after an emergency first aid training session

  • Excellent job! I have a question though...(I have no proper medical knowledge) Why is the pad placed near his armpit?

  • @xxplayguitarxx I don't know if anyone answered you. It's so it can deliver shocks evenly. It depends on the machine also. Because children are smaller goes on the front and one goes on the back to once again make the delivery of the shock even

  • I love how Idiot proof AEDs are

  • To correct my story sorry I was electrocuted on a construction site and it threw my heart rytheme off so they shocked me.

  • Yeah out of body experiences are really weird. I was shocked one time and I remember feeling like I Floated up in the sky. And I watched myself be put in the ambulance and I watched the ambulance drivevto the hospital and then boom white light. I woke up and the doctor was standing over me with paddles. I remember I said holy shit.

  • i bet you he had a out of body experience

  • I work in an ER and on a box and do CPR on someone at least once a shift at the hospital. 100bpm is the standard. They are going way to slow. It was enough to circulate some blood I suppose but in the end the AED saved the day.

  • That's so beautiful.

  • Would I be correct to assume that at 3:55 that that is Agonal Breathing?

  • @memyselfandcorpse2

    Yes it is.

  • Why does the guys tongue move when he gets zapped? Is it just a muscle reflex?

  • amazing work !

  • Those guys are fucking bosses.

  • Good clip, thank you.

    But I´d like to have an update about what happened to the kid...

  • thank god for them being in the right place at the right time.

  • "Taka has been clinically dead for 4 and a half minutes, he has one chance left" FUCKING INTENSE! Poor dude! Shit that man is so lucky to be alive! So lucky to have come back to life.

  • So sad that "GOD" will get credit for this.

    Well done lifeguards, paramedics and fantastic technology

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  • Eight people didn't like this video. Why?

  • Holy shit excellent response, amazing knowledge, teamwork and technology saved his life.

  • his compressions are to slow , the corretc rate is 100bps (same as "staying alive" no joke) 30 compressions 2 breaths and repeat. in an urban setting do not stop til lrelieved by a paramedic, otherwise after 30 mins of continuous cpr stop as the patient is dead and has no chance of recovery.

  • @exotime I dont know what country you are from, but based on what i know you dont stop after 30 mins..

    Im most guidelines for "common-people" the book says continiue as long as you can. I know patients that have been resuscitated for a longer time than 30 minutes. It all depends on weather and temerature..

    In the tv show CSI they have talked about a Norwegian female that layed under icy water for 52 minutes. They got her up, started CPR and continiued all the way to the hospital.

  • @arneslet Hi There, there are two protocols Urban and Wilderness. Additionally there is a distinction btw Normothermic and Hypothermic patients. Urban Protocols assume access to definitive care within 1hr max, Wilderness assumes you are 2hrs away from definitive care.

    Now in an urban setting on a normothermic patient in cardiac arrest you begin cpr at 30/2 and do not stop until relieved by Paramedic. In any setting you dont do chest compressions on a Severily Hypothermic <32dec C.. see next

  • @arneslet ..cntd. on a severily (>32 deg C) hypothermic you only do positive pressure ventilations, their cell metblism is slow and they might have undetectable pulse, compressions might cause ventrical fibrillations and kill 'em. No field reworming. Now, in the wilderness/remote rural protocol on a normothermic patient , after 30 mins of CPR you are free to stop if not relieved by a medic. This is because their chance of survival is zero.

    cntd..to part 3

  • @arneslet ..part3..Survival Percentages (Eisenberg) (normothermic)

    Time to CPR 0-4min with Time to ACLS 0-8min/ 43% 8-16min/19% 16min+/10% >30min/0%

    Time to CPR 4-8min with Time to ACLS 0-8min/26% 8-16min/19% 16min+/5% >30min/0%

    Time to CPR 8-12min  with Time to ACLS 0-8min/N.A. 8-16min/6% 16min+/0% >30min/0%

    ACLS=Advanced Cradiac Life Support = Hospital cardiac unit

    I am a Canadian Wildernes First Responder finished training last month.

  • @arneslet ..with respect to Cold Water Submersion Injury , the urban protocol is immediate Advanced Life Support and hospital transfer, the Wilderness Protocol is if submerged longer then 1hr chances of survival are near to 0 beyond anecdotal. In cold water, rapid cooling of the brain offers temporary protection from damage due to lack of Oxygen> this effect extends survivability to the 1hr mark. +/-

  • @arneslet I'm a second-time certified CPR/Heimlich administer (through the American Red Cross) and agree with you. No matter how long after someone has been unconscious, it is never a good idea to just give up, especially because you are fighting to save someone's life, and to know that there is still a chance (no matter how small) of saving that person's life, it is most definitely worth it. And what these men did at that time was appropriate and they deserve some credit.

  • @Agemrepus theres no question that what they did was appropriate, with the exception of their manual CPR being too slow. but even then- its better then nothing. Mind you their carry technique was flawless.

  • @Agemrepus sure its a good idea to give up if you are showing signs of hypothermia yourself, or your starting to experience chest pains your self or you've been it at for an hour (id like to see any one of you do cpr for an hour straight) and there is no medics on the way. doing cpr you will save a person in one of two ways, their spontaneous pulse resumes or medical support arrives and transports the patient to ACLS within 30mins, (unless hypothermia) . this is not covered in stndr first aid.

  • @Agemrepus keep in mind that stndr first aid is uber basic, look at how it apprches the area of "Shock"..it teaches that victim of trauma is likely to have shock and can die (correct) but it makes no distinction between ASR (acute stress response) and volume shock. ASR looks like shock but wont kill you and gets better, volume shock will kill you if blood loss isnt corrected. This makes a huge diff if there is a time component to the rescue. First aid assumes that paramedics takovr in 20min max

  • @arneslet ..What happens in CSI does not accurately represent what would happen in real life. 

  • @ViralSC2 The CSI episodes i was refering to was talking about a reallife event... This i know for a fact, because I am from Norway.

  • @arneslet There is more chance of surviving long amounts of time under water when its cold. known fact. I'm not just saying this either. I'm a certified lifeguard

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  • @ViralSC2 Their conduct was appropriate for the time this event occurred. Standards change every 1-2 years, and this was give or take 5 years ago. Of course it does not represent today's standards.

  • @exotime CPR was performed correctly as per training I received a few months ago. Also, in Australia, first aiders do not pronounce death - you keep performing CPR until relieved by the ambos or until you are unable to continue.

  • @chromerium Sorry, please see my clarification in response to @arneslet . 100bpm is the updated protocol -please verify your self. I'm in Canada and received my Wilderness First Responder Training last month.

  • @exotime to correct my self here, in an urban setting you do not stop cpr till relieved by a medic, in wilderness/rural (2hrs away from definitive care) after 30mins of CPR you are allowed to stop also if exhausted or if continuing CPR engenders you or your team to exposure injury .

  • @exotime And you should stop to allow for the AED to do its work.

  • @exotime and you have to stop for the AED

  • @exotime yeah bpm is almost correct, its been updated slightly but 30 mins is bull, you don't stop untill paramedics arrive and either take over or announce him dead, you can not stop.

  • @exotime @exotime yeah bpm is almost correct, its been updated slightly but 30 mins is bull, you don't stop untill paramedics arrive and either take over or announce him dead, you can not stop.

  • @exotime This was - the ratios were 15:2 back then but your right they are slow.

  • @exotime This was filmed in 2006 making the ratios correct - although I do agree they are slow.

  • @exotime it definantly depends on what country you're from, different countries have different guidelines, in Canada you're supposed to go until paramedics arrive and take over, after.. i dont know how long they go for. Compressions being too slow? there's not such thing. Too fast? no such thing, you do it the way that'll bring someone back to life, regardless of if it's slow or fast.

  • @exotime There's no 'stop as patient is dead and has no chance of recovery' time frame. You go until you physically can't any longer (which will probably be around 30 minutes anyway unless you're quite fit), or you go until a medical professional is on hand to make that call.

    Also, the 30:2 ratio is for 1 person CPR, not 2. When I was a life saver it was 15:1 for 2-rescurer, but I know that has been updated since. But I agree I think his speed was a little slow, but what do I/we know.

  • @exotime

    Okay, there are three months left. But I want to say that in Germany you stop cpr earliest after 45 mins or when the emergency doctor offical declare the person dead.

  • @exotime Would you be able to do 100bpm? i was tyerd after 30 beats 1/3rd chest depth on a dummy its realy not easy to do. The CPR prosess is constently being changed it was 50bpm then 60 and 80 now there saying forget the breaths as breathing automaticaly hapens when you give each pump and continuesly pump for as long as you can non stop.

  • His cpr beats are WAYYY too slow.

  • Well I guess not all Aussies are racist. 

  • So, is he a zombie?

  • true fucking heros

  • Why is everyone standing around like, wow, how interesting.

    Fair enough, they wanna know if the guy's OK, but there's a thin line between that and gawping at other peoples misfortune, thinking "this is so exiting".

  • @rosydonut Being able to witness someone saved, perhaps.

  • I prefer Bondi vet. lol

  • loving the 'well done, you saved his life' with a standard ozzie hand shake. bonza

  • Hands-only is becoming more common. The AHA is recommending it for bystander CPR. First Responders and medical personnel will still perform CPR with ventilations.

  • What drug did they inject him with? Did I hear maxolone? Is that so he doesn't vomit and aspirate?

  • What about hands only CPR? Is that used more often now?

  • @csspeedbump what do you mean? hands only cpr would be used if no AED is around. that mouth thing does the mouth to mouth for them. if that isn't around you would have to do mouth to mouth. they turn him to the side in the beginning to get rid of any obstruction in his throat. the AED shocks his body then analyzes his body and recommends cpr if needed.

  • @Angiesauraus Gotcha. I was curious since I've been seeing PSA's and the like about how to perform hands only CPR. GaaraCT up there mentioned that it's recommended for bystander CPR. Basically I was curious when that should be used, so I guess it's for someone who isn't trained/isn't an expert?

  • Hotties saving a life. Challenge completed.

  • "....perfect condition" except them saggy ol' titties i just saw flopping across the screen :p

  • well played gentlemen.

  • Heroes, how do they work?

  • fucking heroes.

  • Bondi Beach.... best city beach in the whole world!

    Well done mates! You saved another life. RESPEKT!

  • I wonder if he saw the hereafter... I would love to make an investigation on that!

  • I wonder if he had a near death experience....

  • This video for me went from 'wow those guys are hot'... to 'oh my god, what the hell is going on?!'

    Disturbing.

  • all in all, good job

    if he really had a spinal injury it was really important how they moved him from the water (with the head stabilized)

    i would have pressed a bit faster and maybe as a lifeguard i would have a a emergency rucksack with emergency drugs nearby

    but hey, he was back after 3 cicles

  • @thenfm fuck you

  • Australian badass heros. Amazing!

  • They're doing it WRONG. >.<

  • I want some mescaline also.

  • @GreatVomitto

    mescaline isn't injected, it's swallowed. comes in pellets.

  • @Robstailey So what they inject him? (sorry my english is bad I could not have heard that)

  • @GreatVomitto naloxone, its used for when people od on heroin. i guess it stimulates the heart to beat faster?

  • You mean people don't just jump up and start walking and talking after being revived from death? That's weird, I thought TV shows always told the truth.

  • @Auraten

    ?? what tv shows are you watching?

  • @Robstailey watch?v=k-ck4SsnzxM&feature=pl­ayer_detailpage#t=199s

  • oh australian accents

  • attac

  • HEROES!

  • wooohoo lifeguards!

  • Its cool what they did but they are doing the old standard of CPR. Just saying this so people go and learn CPR themselves with the new standards rather than do "what they saw on TV"

  • Ono's brother NO!!!!

  • fucking stingrays. 

  • every minute your brain goes w/ out oxygen, you lose a 10% chance of living. Humans don't normally survive more than 10 minutes of oxygen deprivation, and if so would most likely suffer from brain damage... I'm sure this kid isn't the same afterwards

  • Great work guys, IMO they're not heroes because they saved this single mans life, they're heroes because that's their job and they try their best to save anyone (without prejudice) whether they are actually able to or not. That's gotta be tougher than anything!

    Great job guys!

  • @innovati Who in their right mind would have prejudice that hinder them in saving lives?

  • Amazing Amazing job 

  • i once watched an episode similar to this, except the man did not survive... was so sad. These guys are truly heroes!

  • @Yurious1 Thanks man.

  • Damn, those lifeguards are heroes AND super sexy AAAND Australian XD

  • Talk about staying calm, these guys are professionals

  • As a lifeguard myself, this sort of situation is the worst possible. Well done lads.

  • The joy you feel when you see him breathing again >.<

  • FANTASTIC! That really is amazing work, guys.

  • Did he drown or have a heart attack ? he is 20 and looks in good shape dont understand how or why he would have a heart attack

  • @Cheevus Nobody really knows, but signs tell us he drowned...

  • @Cheevus Heart attacks can affect anyone, even the fit and young.

  • I do not want to experience that. Seemed quite young too..

  • thats fucking amazing.

  • "clinically dead"

    I think it's funny how they say this as if it carried any weight at all. This type of "dead" simply means no pulse or retinal response. People can be brought back from this quite simply these days. Give me a person who has ceased all brain function and then we can start talking about "dead". lol

  • @HumaninSeoul "Brought back quite easily" sounds like someone needs to go look up cardiac arrest and CPR survival rates. For example: Witnessed In-Hospital Cardiac Arrest - 22% | Bystander Cardiocerebral Resuscitation - 6% | Bystander Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation - 4% | No Bystander CPR (Ambulance CPR) - 2% | Defibrillation within 3–5 minutes - 30%.

    You seem to be thinking of TV medicine where they slap someone and they wake up.

  • @HumaninSeoul To be fair, I'd rather be in almost any situation than one that involves having no pulse.

  • man, i nearly fucking cried...

  • @protozerox at "you've just been in the water and swallowed a lot of water okay"

    

  • @protozerox Nearly? I did fucking cry. I shed manly tears.

  • @protozerox Me too... those men saved his life. Humanity can suck, but sometimes humans are just amazing.

  • double rainbow, that's intense!

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  • he's not considered clinically dead thats absolutely incorrect...

  • @melkon1an How?

  • @timtamboy63 plenty of people present with no palpable pulse, it doesn't mean they're clinically dead. If you cant sense a pulse, it could mean a million things, including occlusion. Clinically dead means they are 100% noncontractile...

  • proly was a seizure and that caused him to drown, not heart attack

  • I'm proud to know a surf liver saver. They are heroes and heroins that need more respect than they get.

    That portable Defrib device is amazing.

  • @webnothing 'Heroines', not to be confused with the plural form of an illicit narcotic.  Also, saw a portable defrib used at a high school basketball game after a coach had a heart attack, they really are a breakthrough medical innovation.

  • @enad58 there is no plural of word "heroin" you fucking idiot

  • @hjdutch He's not talking about the drug, if you actually read the very first sentence of his comment. If you don't think there is a plural of the word "heroine," then /you/ are the idiot. You should double-check your English before you make boisterous claims.

  • @Renulph quote: not to be confused with the plural form of an illicit narcotic.

    how the fuck can you confuse it with a plural form of something that does not have a plural form

    go back to fuckign school kiddo

  • @hjdutch From the looks of it, it appeared as though you were correcting his use of "heroines," not knowing the word exists. Heroins is wrong, of course, but you're still blowing it out of proportion, he was only correcting his *own* typo and making a joke about it.

    Suffice to say, if you think this is in any way indicative of intellectual deficit, then you have a skewed perspective on what defines intelligence. Good thing we have people like you to harp on single letter typos.

  • @hjdutch you are seriously dumb

  • @drmoshie u mad brah? y so mad?

  • @hjdutch you are eleven.

  • @arpgi2, are you off your medication?

  • I had full total cardiac arrest a few years ago. THE scariest moment in my entire life. The scariest part was I did not 'pass out' like some people apparently do. I was fully awake and I could not draw breath and I felt my heart stop for a minute. Thankfully, I had a few heroic people gather around me and tend to me as well.

  • 1) People need to see this so they aren't misguided by Hollywood CPR scenes. There is no full consciousness after CPR, cardiac thumps aren't nearly as effective as they are on movies, there is alot of pain and broken ribs across the sternum. 2) Even after being saved, he can still die of ARDS from the water in his lungs. Like a very very delayed drowning. He would need close medical attention for awhile after this.

  • current american red cross says to do 30 compressions (faster rate than the video) and 2 breaths.

  • damn.. his eyes were all swollen

  • Damn, that was intense.

  • It's CARDIAC, not cadiac...

  • He looks like a fish out of water.

  • The drug they gave him is to stop him from throwing up right? I think I've had that before

  • DO NOT TOUCH PAITENT. ANALYSING RHYTHM. Such cool technology.

  • @Ignitenz It's called an AED, anyone can use it. It should be in any public place for easy access such as malls.

  • Heroes!

  • Is it just me or does he look more like a fish out of water than a guy under cardiac arrest? This really was a merman who for the first time experienced air, thanks to the lifeguards we now have living proof that they exist.

    Heck yeah he experienced spinal injury, his tail-fin just fell off.

  • wooow, these guys are real heros!!

    god bless you guys.

  • Wow, great job guys! Makes me proud to be a lifeguard! Luckily I've never had a situation this bad on my beach!

  • I kept thinking they were calling him Tucker.

  • O what did u do today?

    Nothing much just a photo shoot on the beach and saved a 20 y/o life.

    Guys are truly living this thing we call life. Some real bad asses!

  • These guys are heroes. No doubt about it. And they also did an exceptional job securing his head when the moved him. Textbook. I'm so happy for them and Takahiro Ono.

  • 4:47 THAT IS DEFINITELY GEORGE BUSH!

  • whoever disliked this........ why....

  • I think by analyzing the video it's clear that even though he doesn't have a pulse, his tongue movements suggest he's trying to breathe. Could a Heimlich type procedure expedite his recovery? Maybe pumping his legs or something? I'm not taking away what the lifeguards did, it was awesome and they saved his life and they are heroes.

  • @gor1l1a stfu

  • Wow...freaking awesome!

    

  • I looked at these guys coming out of the beach thinking how they look like such douche bags. Little did I know, they are actually a better person than me...

  • Thank science for that staff with a defib machine.

  • holy balls that was so gripping

  • Those are some extremely weak looking chest compressions...

  • @Tagraz

    It may look like he was doing weak compressions, but the patient was lifeless and wasn't providing any resistance. Compressions like that are often known to result in broken ribs.

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