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Lifesaving music Sophisticated resuscitation techniques have continued to improve, but CPR — the simplest resuscitation method — remains underused. As a results, in the United States, the ...
The Bee Gees classic has been part of CPR cadence training for decades, but Gen Z wanted a new tune: How does “Please Please Please” by Sabrina Carpenter sound?
Move over “Stayin’ Alive” - a new CPR beat is in town, and it’s not disco. It’s Billie Eilish. Yep, the pop queen of whispery vocals and dreamy dread is now the unexpected soundtrack for ...
Taylor Swift's song "Who's Afraid Of Little Old Me?" is the ideal tempo for hands-only CPR, says the American Heart Association.
Three labor and delivery nurses from Texas — Julie Watson, Nicole Curry, and Alyssa Gonzalez — are using Sabrina Carpenter’s hit song “Please Please Please” in a life-saving way.
The Bad Bunny hit 'Titi Me Pregunto' can be used to save lives. Dr. Comilla Sasson of the American Heart Association breaks down how to perform hands-only CPR to the beat of popular music.
It turns out that an infectiously catchy song can also be a lifesaver.Nearly 180 middle school students in Richland, Washington, learned CPR on Wednesday to the tune of the viral "Baby Shark" song ...
The 1977 disco hit "Stayin' Alive" is officially the song to accompany CPR's chest compression. But Japanese scientists are now teaching the lifesaving maneuver using other songs that have the ...
It turns out that an infectiously catchy song can also be a lifesaver.Nearly 180 middle school students in Richland, Washington, learned CPR on Wednesday to the tune of the viral "Baby Shark" song ...
Another group learned to do CPR without music, instead using a device that provides verbal feedback on the efficacy of chest compressions. This group was later tested without the device.