MaltaToday previous editions

MALTATODAY 4 November 2018

Issue link: https://maltatoday.uberflip.com/i/1047665

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 6 of 55

7 maltatoday | SUNDAY • 4 NOVEMBER 2018 JAMES DEBONO ONE of Malta's leading paediatri- cians is calling for the introduction of cardiopulmonary resuscitation skills in the national curriculum for all 14-year-olds, in a bid to save more lives. Sam Attard Montalto made the call in the Medical School Gazette, saying Malta should join Belgium, Denmark, France, Italy and Por- tugal which have introduced CPR training in their national curricula. Already the facts speak for them- selves: between 2016 and 2017, bystanders witnessed 71% of car- diac arrests, but only 39% of these people performed CPR, and only in 9% of these cases was a defibrillator device (AED) used. This delay in intervention has meant that there is only a 6% survival rate for cardiac arrests occurring out of a hospital. CPR is an emergency procedure that combines chest compression with artificial ventilation, in an ef- fort to manually preserve brain function until emergency doctors can restore blood circulation and breathing. The AED is a comput- erised device that shocks the heart back into action when it stops beat- ing or is beating too quickly to cre- ate a pulse. Attard Montalto contends that at 14 children are strong enough to deliver CPR effectively and mature enough to understand its impor- tance. "At this age children are also less likely to be unencumbered by major exams," he said. CPR and the use of an AED are considered to be relatively uncom- plicated skills that can be mastered easily by non-medically trained laypersons. According to Attard Montalto the importance of good, bystander CPR cannot be underestimated. "This requires laypersons to iden- tify the signs of collapse, and be competent to initiate good CPR without delay and certainly before medical help arrives". In Malta the average time for an urgent ambulance to reach a victim varies but, even with optimal cir- cumstances, this is likely to exceed 10 minutes. This is more often than not too late for most victims of cardiac arrest, Attard Montalto said. Cardiopulmonary resuscita- tion (CPR) associated with defi- brillation, if delivered effectively and promptly within 1-2 minutes of cardiac arrest, may improve the chances of survival threefold. To date the Malta Resuscitation Council alone has trained more than 2,000 medical personnel and 1,000 laypersons in CPR. It has also helped train and equip the Health and Safety Unit within the Edu- cation Division who, so far, have trained around 300 schoolchildren. CPR-AED training is now man- datory for all medical students and General Practitioners and young hospital trainees are also required to complete more advanced resus- citation courses. The Red Cross, St John Ambu- lance, Malta Heart Foundation, Order of St Lazarus and others also provide courses in CPR. However, training needs also to be accompanied by greater avail- ability of AEDs. This is because be- tween 25% of 33% of cardiac arrest in adults involve fibrillation. Presently almost 600 AEDs are found in Malta but most are located in private institutions and are not available to the public. Moreover, some of these AEDs are not opera- tive, usually because the battery has lost charge or has expired. Although the Malta International Airport, Air Malta planes, Gozo ferries, most schools, banks, some hotels, factories and social clubs, amongst others, do have at least one AED, Malta needs many more in key and accessible locations to be truly 'covered' according to Attard Montalto. The Valletta local council alone is taking the lead by installing eight AEDs with 24/7 public accesses. A mobile phone AED locator appli- cation is also being developed. "Malta should strive to install (and maintain) AEDs in most if NEWS Teenagers could mend a broken heart Leading paediatrician says Maltese 14-year- olds should get mandatory CPR skills in school not all key positions where significant numbers of indi- viduals are likely to aggre- gate… "Moreover, as happens in most major cities, the dis- tinctive AED locating sign (a green square with a medical cross, heart and lightning bolt) should be widely dis- tributed and clearly visible in numerous locations. Only this eventuality, combined with a sufficient body of trained bystanders who can initiate CPR and operate an AED, will significantly im- prove our survival figures for out-of-hospital cardiac arrest," Attard Montalto said. "At 14 children are strong and mature enough to deliver CPR effectively and less likely to be unencumbered by major exams"

Articles in this issue

Archives of this issue

view archives of MaltaToday previous editions - MALTATODAY 4 November 2018