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Aunque pueda contener afirmaciones, datos o apuntes procedentes de instituciones o profesionales sanitarios, la información contenida en el blog EMS Solutions International está editada y elaborada por profesionales de la salud. Recomendamos al lector que cualquier duda relacionada con la salud sea consultada con un profesional del ámbito sanitario. by Dr. Ramon REYES, MD

Niveles de Alerta Antiterrorista en España. Nivel Actual 4 de 5.

Niveles de Alerta Antiterrorista en España. Nivel Actual 4 de 5.
Fuente Ministerio de Interior de España
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta advanced cardiac life support. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta advanced cardiac life support. Mostrar todas las entradas

domingo, 29 de septiembre de 2024

ZOLL X Series Monitor/ Defibrillator from ZOLL Medical Corporation

ZOLL X Series Monitor/Defibrillator

Great technology, advanced functionality and superior connectivity make the ZOLL X Series a sure-fire winner

One of the first things you notice when you look at the Zoll X Series Monitor/Defibrillator is its remarkably small size. Weighing in at just under 12 lbs, the Zoll X series is about half the size and weight of other competitive full-feature cardiac monitor/defibrillators in the marketplace today.

Extremely small, light, and powerful

At less than 12 pounds (6 kilograms), the X Series™ is about half the size and half the weight of competitive full-featured monitor/defibrillators—but a lot more powerful. It's compact without any compromise in display size, capability, or performance. Designed specifically for EMS, the X Series offers everything you could ever want in an EMS device. And because it's based on a platform developed for the military and air medical operations, the X Series rises to a new standard in ruggedness and durability.http://www.zoll.com/xseries
However, its small size does not in any way equate with small performance. Your patient only needs to remain still for three seconds for the X Series to capture a clean 12-lead EKG. ZOLL’s unique See-thru CPR® feature helps minimize CPR interruptions by filtering out artifact, allowing you to see the underlying cardiac rhythm while CPR is in progress.
ZOLL X Series Monitor Defibrillator full
The large, bright screen on the ZOLL X Series provides great visibility, while at the same time providing simultaneous viewing of up to four tracings. This also includes an innovative split-screen function that provides you with “real time” monitoring while at the same time displaying historical data. In addition, you get the “gold standard” Masimo® Rainbow® SET Pulse CO/Oximetry along with Welch Allyn’s rapid NIBP technology for improved accuracy and reliability of your diagnostic data.
On top of that, you get an incredible 300 shocks at 200 joules, or six hours of continuous monitoring with just one battery.

Should you think the X Series delivers all this technology in a fragile package, banish that thought. The ZOLL X Series meets the demanding Mil-Std 810.6, Method 516.6 for durability with 26 drops from six feet. Great technology, advanced functionality and superior connectivity to the ZOLL RescueNet® Link EMS communications system make the ZOLL X Series a sure-fire winner in the world of emergency cardiac care.
Visit www.zoll.com/emsfire, or call 800/348-9011.

Spanish

El monitor/desfibrilador de la serie X de Zoll Medical autorizado en EE.UU.

by  on  • 1:08 pm
Zoll Medical recibió la aprobación en los EE.UU. para su monitor/desfibrilador de la Serie X, un dispositivo portátil para servicios de emergencias, que pesa menos de 12 libras (6 kilos).  Debido a su tamaño y peso compactos, la serie X puede resultar útil en unidades médicas militares y aéreas, así como en ambulancias terrestres.
 Además de todas las características tradicionales de un monitor/desfibrilador avanzado, el dispositivo es el primero de su clase en ofrecer Wi-Fi, Bluetooth y USB, para conectarse con los sistemas de datos de los hospitales.

Vaya abajo al enlace de la ‘Página del producto’ para ver sus características.
http://youtu.be/eFdZf-tYZhg
Página del producto: X Series Monitor Defibrillator




ZOLL E Series Monitor Defibrillator Rev B Manual del usuario

Idiomas:Español
Páginas:32
Tamaño1.37 MB

Protocolo para el correcto uso y mantenimiento de aparataje de uso sanitario: esfigmomanómetro, desfibrilador y electrocardiógrafo



Dr Ramon REYES, MD,
Por favor compartir nuestras REDES SOCIALES @DrRamonReyesMD, así podremos llegar a mas personas y estos se beneficiarán de la disponibilidad de estos documentos, pdf, e-book, gratuitos y legales..

lunes, 19 de octubre de 2015

Mobile phones should be used to speed help to cardiac arrest victims, guidelines say By AMERICAN HEART ASSOCIATION NEWS

Mobile phones should be used to speed help to cardiac arrest victims, guidelines say
By AMERICAN HEART ASSOCIATION NEWS

Go to the NEW CPR guidelines 2015-2020

New resuscitation guidelines update CPR chest pushes

Attempts to revive people who have stopped breathing date back centuries. But it was in the late 1950s and early 1960s that modern CPR developed.
By AMERICAN HEART ASSOCIATION NEWS
1740 - Paris Academy of Sciences recommends mouth-to-mouth resuscitation for drowning victims.
1891 - Dr. Friedrich Maass performs the first documented chest compressions on a patient.

1903 - Dr. George Crile reports the first successful use of external chest compressions to revive a patient.
1956   - Dr. James Elam and Dr. Peter Safar develop the modern technique of mouth-to-mouth resuscitation.
1958 - Work begins on the Resusci Anne manikin, developed by toy company owner Asmund Laerdal, Dr. Peter Safar and Dr. Bjorn Lind. The training aid is introduced in 1960.
1960 - Dr. James Jude (from left), Dr. William Kouwenhoven and G. Guy Knickerbocker publish a paper in the Journal of the American Medical Association on “closed-chest cardiac massage,” which evolved into cardiopulmonary resuscitation, or CPR.
1963 - The American Heart Association formally endorses CPR.
1966 - The first CPR guidelines are published by the National Academy of Sciences–National Research Council.

1972 - The world’s first mass CPR training program begins in Seattle, certifying more than 100,000 people in the first two years.

1981 - 911 operators in King County, Washington, begin giving CPR instructions over the phone — a practice that is now recommended nationwide.
1983 - The AHA convenes a national conference to develop CPR guidelines for children and infants.
1990s - Public Access Defibrillation programs begin placing automated external defibrillators, or AEDs, in public places and provide training to the public.
2005 - The AHA develops the Family & Friends CPR Anytime Kit, allowing anyone to learn CPR in 20 minutes.
2008 - The AHA introduces Hands-Only CPR.
2015 - Through a network of about 400,000 instructors and 4,000 training centers worldwide, the AHA trains more than 17 million people in CPR each year.
Twenty-seven states now require hands-on, guidelines-based CPR training for high school graduation. Each year, more than 1.6 million public high school graduates will have been trained in CPR.
Sources: American Heart Association, Journal of the American Medical Association, Laerdal Medical

Cities nationwide should consider using mobile phones and apps to connect people in cardiac arrest with nearby CPR-trained rescuers, say new guidelines from the American Heart Association.
The guidelines, published Thursday in Circulation, claim that such community programs could increase bystander CPR, which, depending on the community, is performed in 10 percent to 65 percent of the roughly 326,000 cardiac arrests that happen outside the hospital each year.
Accessing people through a mobile network can get help to the scene faster, said Raina Merchant, M.D., director of the Social Media and Health Innovation Lab at Penn Medicine.
“While emergency system personnel are on their way, bystanders can come by and start helping out,” said Merchant, an assistant professor of emergency medicine at the University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine who was not involved in writing the new guidelines.
About 90 percent of American adults have cellphones and two out of three have smartphones, according to the Pew Research Center.
The new recommendation is largely based on a Swedish study that tested a mobile alert system in Stockholm. The study, published in June in The New England Journal of Medicine, found that bystander CPR was initiated in 62 percent of cardiac arrests among the group who received cellphone alerts. In the group that did not receive alerts, CPR was performed 48 percent of the time.
“There’s a lot of work that needs to be done about how to best optimize these programs,” said Merchant. “Simply having the program doesn’t ensure that people will use it.”
About 1,400 U.S. communities are implementing a CPR mobile alert program developed by the nonprofit PulsePoint Foundation, said president Richard Price. When a cardiac arrest happens, 911 dispatch centers alert responders within a quarter mile of the patient.
Potential responders register through a free mobile app, which alerts them when an emergency occurs, maps directions and reminds them how to give chest compressions. After the emergency, the system sends the local EMS agency a detailed report about the incident and surveys responders about their actions.
“By directly alerting those who are qualified and nearby, maybe in the business next door or on the floor above, PulsePoint is able to put the right people in the right place at the right time,” Price said.
Annual costs to implement the system range from $8,000 a year for communities with up to 300,000 residents to $28,000 a year for populations of 1.5 million or more, according to Price.
Communities already using the alert programs will aid in research about why people respond and how to get them to respond, said Merchant.
In addition to summoning rescuers, cellphones also allow people at the scene of a cardiac emergency to get CPR instructions from 911 dispatchers without leaving the victim’s side. Dispatchers should be trained to help callers recognize cardiac arrest quickly and walk them through chest compressions, the guidelines say.
The AHA recommends that anyone who sees a teenager or adult suddenly collapse call 911 and push hard and fast on the center of the chest, a technique known as Hands-Only CPR.


The AHA guidelines have been updated every five years through a complex process involving more than 250 international experts from the AHA and six other resuscitation councils that form the International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation.
At an AHA-hosted ILCOR conference in early 2015, seven expert panels discussed, debated and reached consensus on hundreds of resuscitation topics, based on research published since the 2010 guidelines.
The AHA used that scientific consensus to create the CPR and Emergency Cardiovascular Care guidelines: “how-to” manuals that translate the science into practice. They are used to train millions of potential rescuers and are integrated into state and local emergency medical services protocols.
“CPR saves lives. That’s the big take-home from the guidelines. A lot of the science that works continues to work,” said Merchant.
“We need more people to do CPR,” she said. “Some will be through mobile, some will be through dispatchers … some will be remembering from a training class. [Mobile] is one part of the solution, but not the only piece.”