*Custom Video* It needs to be completely serious with no sexual overtones or playfulness. The CPR procedure is always to be 15 (fifteen) chest compressions to 5 (five) breaths (despite it actually being 30:2 in real life). I appreciate though that you have a CPR certification. You introduce yourselves as Florida St John Ambulance CPR instructors and welcome the audience to the training module. The training module is introduced as a refresher for those who already have basic resuscitation training. You indicate that for better demonstration purposes, "mouth to mouth ventilation will be administered at a ratio of five instead of two breaths". Akira prepares Sadie to lie down in position to receive mouth to mouth rescue breathing. Akira does a quick scene survey, checks Sadie, does a head tilt, chin lift, nose pinch and airtight mouth seal and starts only mouth to mouth resuscitation (without chest compression) (five breaths at a time). Akira does this for a few cycles of five breaths, breathing check, five breaths, breathing check etc while Sadie is , say for the first minute or so. This then progresses to the full CPR ratio for the rest of the five minutes i.e. repetitions of 15 compressions to 5 breaths. Roles are reversed, so Sadie now receives CPR as per the above guidelines from Akira. Akira demonstrates a full CPR emergency scene from beginning to end, after calling 911, on Sadie. This is mostly 15:5 compressions to breaths, but is intermixed with periods of prolonged rescue breathing only while Sadie is semi conscious, Akira having explained that it is sometimes necessary to ventilate a casualty who is struggling to breathe when compressions are not necessary. When being ventilated while semi conscious, Sadie can mostly have open eyes. Notes: - avoid hair of any actor obstructing or blocking any of the views of any rescue breathing or any other action - the views must be full and clear. - rescue breathing cheeks puffed out for the rescuer and rescued; - proper head tilt, chin lift, jaw grip and jaw thrust, tight nose pinch and airtight mouth to mouth seal; - for chest compressions, extremely straight arms and interlocked hands & fingers; - proper locating of hands' position on the chest; - rescue breathing and compressions to be audible and clear wherever possible; - watching and checking for chest rise wherever possible; - the chest should inflate realistically but not excessively - just as it would realistically during normal CPR. - various camera angles and close ups from both sides of actors; also from the feet looking upwards; from the head looking downwards; from various points of view that work best for this sort of scenario including plenty of focus on the rescue breathing.
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