Cardiopulmonary resuscitation performed by bystanders: a systematic review

Cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) is the most popular treatment for unexpected cardiac arrest. In order to enhance the survival and neurological prognosis of out of hospital cardiac arrest patients, both healthcare practitioners and lay rescuers must learn this technique. Millions of people die ea...

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Main Authors: Yasin, Selamat, Abu Bakar, Siti Azuna, Nurumal, Mohd. Said, Ahmad Arifin, Syamsul
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IIUM Press 2023
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Online Access:http://irep.iium.edu.my/109098/7/109098_Cardiopulmonary%20resuscitation%20performed%20by%20bystanders.pdf
http://irep.iium.edu.my/109098/
https://journals.iium.edu.my/ijcs/index.php/ijcs/article/view/285
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Institution: Universiti Islam Antarabangsa Malaysia
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spelling my.iium.irep.1090982023-12-21T01:57:01Z http://irep.iium.edu.my/109098/ Cardiopulmonary resuscitation performed by bystanders: a systematic review Yasin, Selamat Abu Bakar, Siti Azuna Nurumal, Mohd. Said Ahmad Arifin, Syamsul RT71 Study and Teaching RT86.4 Nurse and physician or other health professionals Cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) is the most popular treatment for unexpected cardiac arrest. In order to enhance the survival and neurological prognosis of out of hospital cardiac arrest patients, both healthcare practitioners and lay rescuers must learn this technique. Millions of people die each year as a result of sudden cardiac arrest across the world due to ineffective CPR performed by bystander. The aim of this review is to identify the existing literature on knowledge, attitude and practice of the community at the out of hospital cardiac arrest level. Guided by the PRISMA Statement review checklist, a systematic review of the Scopus and Web of Science database and Science Direct has identified 332 related studies. The articles were assessed and analysed after evaluation using The Critical Appraisal Skills Programme Qualitative checklist. Total article accepted were n=11. We reviewed 1150 articles and selected 332 for complete evaluation. We included 11 of the 332 papers in this review that was published since 2018. We classified 11 recommendations; those with the highest scores were 1) Knowledge assisted CPR among bystander CPR remain poor, 2) CPR challenge on stranger, 3) CPR challenge on barrier, 4) The impact on quality CPR on survival rate and 5) Conventional CPR with mouth to mouth vs chest-compression only - CPR. CPR at out-of-hospital cardiac arrest, with several factors that influences such as knowledge, attitude, practice of community bystander CPR. While, the willingness (self-efficacy), the barriers and reluctant of bystander CPR still not clear. The targeted group for CPR training and tailored of training CPR for the bystander CPR give the effect and quality of CPR performance. Furthermore, the motivating factors to begin CPR at the out-of-hospital cardiac arrest level that emerged from a study of these publications. Recommendations not supported by evidence include mass training events, pulse taking prior to CPR by community and CPR using chest compressions alone. We evaluated and classified the potential impact of interventions that have been proposed to improve bystander CPR rates. Our results may help communities design interventions to improve their bystander CPR rates. IIUM Press 2023-03-31 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://irep.iium.edu.my/109098/7/109098_Cardiopulmonary%20resuscitation%20performed%20by%20bystanders.pdf Yasin, Selamat and Abu Bakar, Siti Azuna and Nurumal, Mohd. Said and Ahmad Arifin, Syamsul (2023) Cardiopulmonary resuscitation performed by bystanders: a systematic review. International Journal of Care Scholars, 6 (1). pp. 71-91. ISSN 2600-898X https://journals.iium.edu.my/ijcs/index.php/ijcs/article/view/285 10.31436/ijcs.v6i1.285
institution Universiti Islam Antarabangsa Malaysia
building IIUM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider International Islamic University Malaysia
content_source IIUM Repository (IREP)
url_provider http://irep.iium.edu.my/
language English
topic RT71 Study and Teaching
RT86.4 Nurse and physician or other health professionals
spellingShingle RT71 Study and Teaching
RT86.4 Nurse and physician or other health professionals
Yasin, Selamat
Abu Bakar, Siti Azuna
Nurumal, Mohd. Said
Ahmad Arifin, Syamsul
Cardiopulmonary resuscitation performed by bystanders: a systematic review
description Cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) is the most popular treatment for unexpected cardiac arrest. In order to enhance the survival and neurological prognosis of out of hospital cardiac arrest patients, both healthcare practitioners and lay rescuers must learn this technique. Millions of people die each year as a result of sudden cardiac arrest across the world due to ineffective CPR performed by bystander. The aim of this review is to identify the existing literature on knowledge, attitude and practice of the community at the out of hospital cardiac arrest level. Guided by the PRISMA Statement review checklist, a systematic review of the Scopus and Web of Science database and Science Direct has identified 332 related studies. The articles were assessed and analysed after evaluation using The Critical Appraisal Skills Programme Qualitative checklist. Total article accepted were n=11. We reviewed 1150 articles and selected 332 for complete evaluation. We included 11 of the 332 papers in this review that was published since 2018. We classified 11 recommendations; those with the highest scores were 1) Knowledge assisted CPR among bystander CPR remain poor, 2) CPR challenge on stranger, 3) CPR challenge on barrier, 4) The impact on quality CPR on survival rate and 5) Conventional CPR with mouth to mouth vs chest-compression only - CPR. CPR at out-of-hospital cardiac arrest, with several factors that influences such as knowledge, attitude, practice of community bystander CPR. While, the willingness (self-efficacy), the barriers and reluctant of bystander CPR still not clear. The targeted group for CPR training and tailored of training CPR for the bystander CPR give the effect and quality of CPR performance. Furthermore, the motivating factors to begin CPR at the out-of-hospital cardiac arrest level that emerged from a study of these publications. Recommendations not supported by evidence include mass training events, pulse taking prior to CPR by community and CPR using chest compressions alone. We evaluated and classified the potential impact of interventions that have been proposed to improve bystander CPR rates. Our results may help communities design interventions to improve their bystander CPR rates.
format Article
author Yasin, Selamat
Abu Bakar, Siti Azuna
Nurumal, Mohd. Said
Ahmad Arifin, Syamsul
author_facet Yasin, Selamat
Abu Bakar, Siti Azuna
Nurumal, Mohd. Said
Ahmad Arifin, Syamsul
author_sort Yasin, Selamat
title Cardiopulmonary resuscitation performed by bystanders: a systematic review
title_short Cardiopulmonary resuscitation performed by bystanders: a systematic review
title_full Cardiopulmonary resuscitation performed by bystanders: a systematic review
title_fullStr Cardiopulmonary resuscitation performed by bystanders: a systematic review
title_full_unstemmed Cardiopulmonary resuscitation performed by bystanders: a systematic review
title_sort cardiopulmonary resuscitation performed by bystanders: a systematic review
publisher IIUM Press
publishDate 2023
url http://irep.iium.edu.my/109098/7/109098_Cardiopulmonary%20resuscitation%20performed%20by%20bystanders.pdf
http://irep.iium.edu.my/109098/
https://journals.iium.edu.my/ijcs/index.php/ijcs/article/view/285
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