Using an audiovisual feedback device improves cardiopulmonary resuscitation performance during day and night – a randomized controlled simulation study

Dublin Core

Title

Using an audiovisual feedback device improves cardiopulmonary resuscitation performance during day and night – a randomized controlled simulation study

Description

Survival of in-hospital-cardiac-arrests is lower when they occur at night and at weekends than when they occur during the day. Despite numerous studies, there is little evidence regarding the cardiopulmonary resuscitation quality at night and the influence of a feedback device depending on time of day. The present study investigates the differences between chest compressions at night and during the day, with and without the use of a feedback device.

Creator

Melanie Preuss, Rainer Röhrig, Christian Hübel, Clara Vos, Jenny Unterkofler, Jörg Christian Brokmann, Klaus Willmes & Christopher Plata

Source

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12873-025-01249-1

Publisher

https://link.springer.com/journal/12873

Date

07 june 2025

Contributor

Fajar bagus W

Format

PDF

Language

English

Type

Text

Files

Collection

Citation

Melanie Preuss, Rainer Röhrig, Christian Hübel, Clara Vos, Jenny Unterkofler, Jörg Christian Brokmann, Klaus Willmes & Christopher Plata, “Using an audiovisual feedback device improves cardiopulmonary resuscitation performance during day and night – a randomized controlled simulation study,” Repository Horizon University Indonesia, accessed June 17, 2025, https://repository.horizon.ac.id/items/show/9441.