
CPR is a simple set of skills, but it can make a huge difference in the outcome for people who experience one of several different types of cardiac arrest. Some recent guidelines have promoted hands-only CPR (CPR without ventilation), which has led to many questions and debates in the diving community. Hereโs what you should know as you teach your CPR classes.
Youโre a dive professional; at a minimum, you know the basics of CPR and can teach the techniques to your students. Some people spend their entire careers defining and updating standards for CPR and similar emergency skills, and twice every year a group of such people gathers for the International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation (ILCOR) to discuss the latest research on emergency resuscitation techniques and how it should be implemented in training, education, and guidelines. Recent ILCOR meetings have brought significant changes to CPR, increasing focus on compressions and circulation and altering the historical training model.

These guidelines are designed primarily to address the most common and treatable types of sudden cardiac arrest: ventricular fibrillation and ventricular tachycardia. All other types of cardiac arrest (including drowning) are considered special conditions and are covered by additional guidelines. In a sudden cardiac arrest caused by irregular heart rhythms the blood is still sufficiently oxygenated to support life for several minutes, so the priority in these cases is to circulate blood and deliver that oxygen to the brain. Untrained rescuers often spend too much time focusing on ventilations or other tasks, and these guidelines aim to keep that oxygenated blood circulating even if ventilation cannot be performed. Compression-only CPR stems from these recommendations; it is commonly taught outside of the diving industry.

In cases of drowning the heart typically does not stop until the bodyโs oxygen reserves have been completely depleted. If a victim is hypoxic, chest compressions alone will have little benefit without re-oxygenation of the blood, so ventilation becomes a priority. This is the crux of the hands-only versus traditional CPR debate, and itโs the reason CPR with ventilation is still taught to divers.
For traditional ABC-model CPR, ILCOR special-case guidelines still apply and can be found on the American Heart Association website at CPR.Heart.org. These guidelines also include the recommendation to limit interruptions in compressions to eight seconds or less, making effective and efficient ventilations an important priority, but ultimately they remain fairly similar to prior guidelines.
For more information on CPR or other first aid skills, visit DAN.org.

