Black and Latino people experiencing cardiac arrest are 41% less likely than White people to receive CPR. Even while at home, White people found in cardiac arrest are more likely to get CPR than Black or Latino people, according to a American_Heart study
, Black and Latino people experiencing cardiac arrest are 41% less likely than their White peers to receive cardiopulmonary resuscitation, better known as CPR, from a bystander. The same study also found that even at home, White people in cardiac distress are more likely to receive CPR than Black or Latino people.
But health professionals say just about anyone with hands can help save a heart — and since according to AHA statistics, 52% of Latino men and 43% of Latinas have cardiovascular disease, it’s an important skill to learn.Dr. Nicholas Cozzi, director of emergency management services at Rush University Medical Center, said one theory is that COVID-19 played a role in causing the gap.
“Some hypothesize that a result of COVID restrictions, when people were more hesitant to engage,” Cozzi said. Cozzi and Dr. Daniel Reyes, a resident physician at Rush, are among the faculty who offer free CPR training sessions to the community. Groups interested in scheduling a training can begin by emailingReyes said part of the training is helping people overcome any hesitation they might feel about performing CPR.
“I think one of the biggest barriers to CPR in general is kind of this phenomenon that we in medicine, we call activation energy — just, ‘Am I even able to do this?’” Reyes said. “And I think part of what we try to teach to any group that we provide these trainings to, including Latinos, is you can do this just with your two hands, here are a few steps that you can remember.”“We want to … lower the activation energy by making this accessible, approachable,” Cozzi said.
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