Sunday, December 28, 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

Canada exploring ways to reunite families divided by COVID-19 border closure

Canada exploring ways to reunite families divided by COVID-19 border closure
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says the federal government is exploring ways to reunite family members divided by the temporary travel restrictions at the Canada-U.S. border.

Canada exploring ways to reunite families divided by COVID-19 border closure

Hospice's refusal to provide assisted death causes 'anxiety,' says B.C. mayor

Hospice's refusal to provide assisted death causes 'anxiety,' says B.C. mayor
A hospice that has a long history of helping people near death but denies them medical assistance in dying is drawing criticism from the city's mayor in a clash of ideologies that has split its board and raised questions about its future.

Hospice's refusal to provide assisted death causes 'anxiety,' says B.C. mayor

New site is one-stop shop for B.C. workers, farmers, during pandemic

New site is one-stop shop for B.C. workers, farmers, during pandemic
The British Columbia government has created a new online resource to help the province's agricultural sector find workers during the COVID-19 pandemic.

New site is one-stop shop for B.C. workers, farmers, during pandemic

20 bricks of suspected cocaine seized at the Pacific Highway port of entry in British Columbia

20 bricks of suspected cocaine seized at the Pacific Highway port of entry in British Columbia
The CBSA seized 20 bricks of suspected cocaine at the Pacific Highway port of entry Commercial Operations. On May 1, 2020, border services officers conducted an examination on a commercial tractor-trailer and noticed anomalies.

20 bricks of suspected cocaine seized at the Pacific Highway port of entry in British Columbia

New research sheds light on physical distancing during COVID-19

New research sheds light on physical distancing during COVID-19
How close is too close for COVID-19? Physical distancing mesures by WHO may need to be reworked according to scientists.

New research sheds light on physical distancing during COVID-19

Liberal MPs call for national standards for long-term care homes

Liberal MPs call for national standards for long-term care homes
Justin Trudeau is being pressured by some of his own Liberal backbenchers to implement enforceable national standards for the operation of long-term care homes in Canada.

Liberal MPs call for national standards for long-term care homes