City Mayor Yap leads
CDRRM CPR trainees
TAGBILARAN
CITY, Bohol, July 17, (PIA)—“Mas maayo na
lang nang naa tay nahibaw-an nga dili magamit , kay sa wala tay kahibaw sa
panahon nga nay panginahanglan mag-gamit.”
Tagbilaran
City Mayor John Geesnell Yap II gave this as opening message and welcome address
to the hundreds who came to the City Hall Atrium as the City Disaster and Risk
Reduction Management Council (CDRRMC under Gerard Lavadia, partners with
paramedics for a hands only mass training on cardio-pulmonary resuscitation
(CPR), July 17.
City Mayor
Yap along with his close in security and some city hall officials also signed
in for the training which the Philippine College of Physicians Bohol Chapter
official Dr. Angelito Lechago hopes would help put up a Philippine record for
the most number of trained individuals in CPR for a day.
Earlier
that day, some 1,500 students and faculty members of the Bohol Wisdom School
joined the training which equipped evey the young kids the necessary working
skills to save life during when someone has a cardiac arrest.
Yap, who
said his wife has also signed in but was still tied up with an appointment at
that time said, “lucky sila ug akong wife
kay malakuwas ko nila, but dili sila makaluwas nako,” Yap said in jest.
A few
minutes later, the mayor’s wife Jane, walked in and joined in the
training.
The
training also coincides with the national simultaneous mass training on the
most basic life support to help curb the leading cause of death that the
country faces.
According
to Bohol Medical Society president Dr. Jane Ramiro, cardiac arrest has been
among the leading causes of death in the country, and that sudden cardiac
arrest can be remedied if the proper resuscitation can be done within the first
few minutes when a person collapses and stops breathing.
CPR is the emergency
procedure, not necessarily done by medical professionals, but possibly by
trained individuals whoc can perform the necessary and proper chest
compressions to help the circulation of oxygen from the heart to the brain and
other parts of the body to preserve the brain functions.
It would
only take between four to six minutes of oxygen deprivation and some brain
cells would die, which can be catastrophic to the cardiac arrest victim, Dr.
Ramiro explains to the volunteers and city hall officials and employees eagerly
signing up for the life support training.
Always
check the environment and the surroundings before performing CPR, she said,
chances are, there might be falling objects and this could complicate the
situation.
Check the
victim’s responsiveness, if he is breathing and is far from any other danger
Other CPR
practitioners also recommend to check on the airway, breathing before doing the
necessary compression, while some insist that it is compression, airway and
breathing, or the reverse order.
Before
starting the compressions however, Dr. Ramiro said the responder must call for
help, as the compressions can only be temporary until the emergency responders
with defibrillators can take over and perform the necessary steps to save the
life in the medical emergency.
For hands
only CPR, Ramiro instructed everyone who had prepositioned themselves beside a
dummy: “Kneel beside the victim.”
Interlock
your fingers and while making sure that the elbows are fully stretched, place
the heel of your hand between the ribcage and the sternum, she went on, as the
volunteers who filled the entire atrium also did as told.
“Start the
compression at the rate of 100 to 120 per minute, pushing with the body on
stretched elbows two inches deep,” her voice reverberated in the hall.
Follow the
rhythm, she said as Beegees “Staying Alive,” played on the loudspeakers
installed for the occasion.
That
afternoon, an estimated 500 volunteers, employees and officials completed the
mass CPR training. (rahc/PIA-7/Bohol)
STAYING
ALIVE. City Mayor John Geesnell Yap II and his wife Jane Censoria Yap perform
the CPR as the city officials showed support to the drive to educate as much
people on the basics of CPR as basic life support during cardiac arrests.
(rahc/PIA-7/Bohol)

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