News

Miguel, Esq., and Safety & Risk Control Consultant at WCF Insurance dropped by our studio this morning to talk infant CPR, an ...
The American Heart Association reports that Black and Hispanic adults were 26% less likely to receive bystander CPR than white adults, and that number was even lower if they were experiencing ...
By Laura Williamson, American Heart Association News Black or Hispanic adults who experience a witnessed cardiac arrest outside the hospital are substantially less likely than their white peers to ...
Black and Hispanic adults who go into cardiac arrest in public are less likely to receive CPR from anyone standing by before a medical team arrives.
White adults are three times more likely to survive cardiac arrest after receiving bystander CPR than Black adults are, a new study found. Likewise, men are twice as likely to survive after ...
Gaston County police officer Moe Mahmoud responded to a 911 call about an infant in cardiac arrest. When he arrived, he saved the baby's life, stabilizing her until EMS arrived.