"Stayin Alive" Helps You Stay Alive
In a small study conducted at the University of Illinois medical school, doctors and students maintained close to the ideal number of chest compressions doing CPR while listening to the Bee Gees hit, "Stayin' Alive." At 103 beats per minute, the old disco song has almost the perfect rhythm to help keep accurate time while doing chest compressions. The study showed the song helped people who already know how to do CPR, and the results were promising enough to warrant larger, more definitive studies with real patients or untrained people. I wonder what intrinsic power is contained in "How Can You Mend A Broken Heart?"
Before I have to read another Idle story. And please don't bring me back until it is gone.
I need to get out more, when I read "Staying Alive", I thought they were referring to Still Alive.Which, when you think about it, would help you stay alive in the scenario that you wake up in an Aperture Science Lab.
...you get your CPR, you can sing "Still Alive" from Portal.
Except the ones who are dead.
The patient wakes up hearing someone on top of them singing disco. They'll probably think they woke up in hell, have a stroke and die.
God spoke to me.
We've actually already started implementing this technique for a couple of years in EMT and Paramedic School.
But there's no sense crying over every mistake, you just keep on trying...
Got this from the database...first read it as "Cowboy Neal" as the singer.
"Neal McCoy" "That Woman Of Mine" 103 BPM Atlantic Records 1996
You say this as a joke, but my girlfriends ACLS instructor (she's a nurse) pointed out that you can, indeed, use Queen's "Another one bites the dust". The bpm is nearly identical.
Ironic.
"Ironic" is kinda slow for CPR... Don'cha think?
Bow-ties are cool.
One of my CPR instructors taught us to use the beat of "another one bites the dust".
http://spaz.mindstab.net/djspaz_-_still_alive_glados_reawakened_mix.mp3
Night Fever
When I did my EMT training, the song I learned was "Another one bites the dust". My instructor also told us not to start singing during compressions.
I've been certified for 13 years and I remember being taught the "Staying Alive" trick way back then. Now it's been studied and it's suddenly news.
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