U.S. News & World Report: Asian-Americans Less Likely to Survive Cardiac Arrest Despite Equal CPR Efforts
Asian adults in the United States who suffer cardiac arrest are less likely to survive than white adults, despite similar rates of receiving bystander CPR, a new study finds.
"Receiving bystander CPR is usually a very strong predictor of survival after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest, therefore, it is not entirely clear what may be driving the lower survival rate among Asian adults," said Dr. Paul Chan, the study's senior author and cardiologist at Saint Luke's Mid America Heart Institute.
Read the full U.S. News & World Report article: Asian-Americans Less Likely to Survive Cardiac Arrest Despite Equal CPR Efforts
Relevant News
Article
Health News You Can Use: Cancer Research Month
News
FOX 4: KC Doctors, Mothers Speak Out About Maternal Deaths in Missouri
News
Quality Improvement Initiative Ups Adherence to Heart Failure Therapy
Article
SGLT2 Inhibitors: From Glucose-Lowering to Cardio Protection
News
EMS Practices for OHCA Diverge Between Black/Hispanic, White Areas
News