Friday, December 26, 2025
ADVT 
National

CPR board created for faster COVID response

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 Sep, 2020 08:45 PM
  • CPR board created for faster COVID response

A new piece of medical equipment created at the University of Alberta may help doctors find a quicker and safer way to resuscitate patients who go into cardiac arrest due to COVID-19.

The novel coronavirus can create complications in the lungs, and many patients are placed on their bellies to improve ventilation.

Matthew Douma, an assistant adjunct professor of critical care medicine at the U of A, says if patients go into cardiac arrest, doctors have to turn them onto their backs to perform cardiopulmonary resuscitation, or CPR.

Turning patients can cause delay and put doctors at risk because they have closer contact with infected patients.

Douma says he's part of a group that has created a new CPR board that can be placed under patients while they are prone, with a piece that adds pressure to the chest area while medical staff do compressions on their backs.

The U of A says 10,000 people have already downloaded the design for the board and five hospitals in Brazil are using it.

MORE National ARTICLES

University says it's making changes after crash that killed two students

University says it's making changes after crash that killed two students
A report into a bus crash that killed two University of Victoria students calls for travel during daylight hours on a narrow logging road that it says should be improved by the provincial government.

University says it's making changes after crash that killed two students

Senate regrets, will explore compensation, for employees harassed by ex-senator

Senate regrets, will explore compensation, for employees harassed by ex-senator
The Senate's administrative committee said in a statement today it regrets that some staff of former senator Don Meredith were harassed and sexually harassed by him while they were in his employ.

Senate regrets, will explore compensation, for employees harassed by ex-senator

Safe, clean campsites to be made available for seasonal fruit pickers in B.C.

Safe, clean campsites to be made available for seasonal fruit pickers in B.C.
One campsite is planned for the Oliver area in the southern Okanagan and two more are slated for Creston in southeastern B.C., with the province providing about $60,000 for each site.

Safe, clean campsites to be made available for seasonal fruit pickers in B.C.

Privacy commissioners in B.C., Ontario, order LifeLabs to improve security

Privacy commissioners in B.C., Ontario, order LifeLabs to improve security
A joint investigation by the privacy commissioners of Ontario and British Columbia says Lifelabs failed to put in place reasonable safeguards to protect the personal health information of millions of Canadians.

Privacy commissioners in B.C., Ontario, order LifeLabs to improve security

Advocacy groups question Vancouver street check review, call for ban

Advocacy groups question Vancouver street check review, call for ban
Advocacy groups are questioning the validity of a Vancouver police board review of street checks after an incident reported by the authors didn't make it into the published final copy.

Advocacy groups question Vancouver street check review, call for ban

Bowing to Beijing would put 'an awful lot more Canadians' at risk, Trudeau says

Bowing to Beijing would put 'an awful lot more Canadians' at risk, Trudeau says
Trudeau did not budge from his stance that it would send the wrong message to drop extradition proceedings against Chinese telecommunications executive Meng Wanzhou in the hope of winning freedom for entrepreneur Michael Spavor and former diplomat Michael Kovrig.

Bowing to Beijing would put 'an awful lot more Canadians' at risk, Trudeau says