• Resuscitation · Dec 1994

    Comparative Study

    The reluctance of house staff to perform mouth-to-mouth resuscitation in the inpatient setting: what are the considerations?

    • B Brenner, B Stark, and J Kauffman.
    • Department of Medicine, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA, USA.
    • Resuscitation. 1994 Dec 1; 28 (3): 185-93.

    ObjectiveMedical house staff are required to perform cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) as part of their job responsibilities. Previously it has been shown that house staff are reluctant to perform mouth-to-mouth resuscitation (MMR) in an out of hospital setting. Therefore, whether reluctance to perform MMR extends to the inpatient setting, and, if so, the reasons for this reluctance were investigated.DesignAll 74 internal medicine house officers of a large metropolitan hospital responded to presentations of hypothetical inpatient cardiac arrest scenarios to assess their willingness to perform MMR.SettingA 1200 bed university-affiliated teaching hospital in Los Angeles, California.SubjectsAll categorical internal medicine house officers at this hospital.InterventionsThis study is a survey which concerns whether the house officer would perform mouth-to-mouth resuscitation in different hypothetical cardiac arrest scenarios.ResultsForty-five percent would perform MMR on an unknown patient and 39% would perform MMR in the elderly patient scenario. Only 16% would do MMR on a patient with a small amount of blood on his lips and only 7% would perform MMR on a patient with presumed acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. Medical housestaff were much more reluctant to perform MMR on elderly, trauma, or presumed immunodeficient patients in an inpatient setting than in an outpatient setting. All house staff that indicated their unwillingness to perform MMR cited fear of human immunodeficiency virus infection as their reason.ConclusionMedical housestaff are quite reluctant to perform MMR in an inpatient setting. Thus, educating the medical house staff about the percent of patients that survive inpatient cardiac arrest and the actual risks of contracting infectious diseases, especially HIV infections, from MMR and preventative measures, such as effective barrier masks, should result in an increased willingness of physicians to perform MMR or mouth-to-mask ventilation on inpatients.

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