Added: 2 years ago
From: medatrain
Views: 49,038
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  • Guys, this video is very old. Back in the days it was 80 cpm, later 100 cpm and nowadays 120 cpm. They worked according to guidelines they had years ago. Besides, they were off duty and did not have all personal protection accessoires with them.

  • Only Death Disliked this video !!

  • most likely hypocalemia due to heavy physical activities...the guy who perform chest compression should push hard and push fast at least 100/min..anyway the chicks around there more attract my attention than the lying guy.

  • so...don't your brain cells begin to die by then?

  • @Noobpatty They do, he probably can't do some things that he did before, or maybe just not as well, but I think after 5 or 10 minutes or something like that is when it's severe, but I don't know.

  • what was with his tongue

  • This is incredible. And I can understand why the lifeguards aren't using BSI (gloves), but where are the paramedic's....

  • Why the fuck is there even one dislike? This is phenomenal!!

  • Amazing how many people criticise things like not wearing gloves, not checking for danger and not performing CPR according to guidelines.

    Firstly, putting on latex gloves with wet hands is tricky and the idea of gloves would quickly go to the back of your mind in this situation.

    Secondly, these guys are professionals; They know what dangers to look for. Finally, the guidelines change regularly (it's currently 30 compressions to 2 breaths in the UK) and they probably differ country to country.

  • Is it me or does one of them look like Russell Crowe...

  • A pitty they don't perform correct CPR according to guidelines,

  • Season 6 Episode 4 of Bondi Rescue shows another near drowning with CPR.

  • Chest compressions are too slow - we now aim for 100/minute. However they still save him.

    We watched this in ILS training last week to emphasis what Agonal breathing is - tongue coming out of mouth but chest not rising -so not breathing.

    Once he starts to recover after shocking you see his chest rise and fall and his colour returns.

  • too slow.....

  • i call this as a miracle

  • Did they do 2 rescue breaths.....?...i didnt see an initial assesment

  • I have to buy a defibrillator ASAP!

  • To the critics:

    1. Compressions were late due to rescue breaths (he was found in the water)

    2. How do you know they didn't check for danger?

    3. You may have been told not to check for pulses because lay-people cannot find one with any degree of certainty

    4. No gloves were available - chest compressions and bag & mask ventilation don't expose you or the patient to bodily fluids

    This was a first class performance CPR, they saved his life calmly and professionally.

  • Comment removed

  • @so62141

    cpr 100 to 120 bpm.... did't see it..

    there where lucky that the cpr brougth him back

  • This is the slowest CPR I have ever seen!

  • I was on Bondi Beach Christmas 1990 and saw exactly the same thing.

    they guy was Japanese but they unfortunately never saved his life.

    How things have advanced.

  • I like how they were all calm during the situation, you won't see such professionalism in America...

  • Watching this young man start breathing again was one of the most beautiful things I've ever seen. Still, it is terrifying to think, aside from the fact that his heart and lungs had stopped, how traumatic and damaging even a near-drowning can be. I hope his recovery was short and successful!

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  • This is a really good video. But they didnt start CPR quick enough and they didnt check for danger around them or the patient. The human brain dies in three minutes or less if CPR is carried out asap. ive performed CPR on a young man who collapsed in the shop and used a defibrillator and gosh its scary but he survived. He collapsed right infront of me and wasnt breathing for 25 mins and without CPR he would have died

  • what happened to him next?

  • oh my gosh... dude his face is all blue O.O So glad he was ok

  • Those guys are heroes.

  • since the heart is very weak after a resuscitation from a ventricular/tachycardia fibrillation, for me they had to continue at least with 2 CPR acts. So 60 compression and 2 insufflation, just to make the heart stronger and to give it a correct rhythm

  • did we ever find out what happened to him, why he was in the water unconscious?

  • wow this was a fantastic job. 3rd times a very good charm in this case. well done by the LGs. id go to that beach.

  • omg thats crazy

  • Always use protection and put on a rubber...

    gloves

  • Note the central cyanosis, facial swelling and agonal breaths throughout his arrest > 5 mins. Also interesting de-corticate posturing. Notice how quick colouration and conscious level returns with spont.pulse. To the naysayers below... these guys are total pros and would love to see more of this calm professional and non-ego behaviours at arrests. What a result. Well done guys. Can I please use for training health professionals.

  • Comment removed

  • Fail on the gloves. Always protect yourself first.

  • They should have put gloves onright away not near the end. Even then a couple guys still have no protection.

  • took them long enough to begin CPR...

  • @Scorptarius u have to check for a pulse first. cpr on a beating heart will kill the patient

  • @KokSquad  thanks tips, i'm a paramedic.

  • @Scorptarius Comments like these and the people who upvote them make me lose faith in the human race. If I were to drown someday I'd be grateful to these guys. I wouldn't be a douchebag like Scorptarius. You and all who upvoted are horrible people.

  • @gor1l1a lol wow if you consider my comment a "douchebag" comment you really ought to see a counselor on your hypersensitivity issues. And you're a horrible person for calling a complete stranger, entitled to their opinion by the way, a "douchebag." Now throw out the box of tissues and cowboy up, this monkey planet isn't some fluffy cartoon.

  • Comment removed

  • In advanced protocol, they still do check for central pulses. The pulse check protocol was removed for lay-rescuers not so much the first responders.

  • ahhh ok. Why the hell did I get 6 thumbs down???? lol?

    When I did my pool life guarding course I wasn't taught to check for a pulse.

  • Lol. Ya back a long time ago Emergency First Aid rescuers and other lay-rescuers were taught with pulses. And even the jaw thrust protocol was taught. Recently, about 3/ 5 years ago, new health regulations came into effect and removed pulse checks and jaw thrust protocols beacuse lay-rescuers were not doing it right. In advanced protocol they pretty much kept things the same except for the compression to ventilation ratio for C.P.R which was changed for everybody.

  • Wow !!!

  • did he have cardiac arrest?

  • I am a NEW community first responder from London, it was great to see a defibrillator used for real rather than just in training!!

  • well ideally you'd rather not have to see one being used, but ya......good job here

  • Obviously in an ideal world they would never be used, but sadly we do not live in an ideal world. :-(

    This video is a very good visual aid to the use of an AED for real.

    I have a better understanding on how the patient will react to CPR and the use of an AED from seeing this video.

  • Are you part of SJA?

  • Amazing, I can't believe this guy was actually dead for 4 and a half minutes!

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