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Differences in CPR recipients' income and where they lived did not alter the outcomes for Black people and women, the study found. The causes for these stark survival differences aren't clear.
(CNN) — Survival rates for Black women are far worse after bystander CPR than for White men, according to a study published this month in the American Heart Association journal Circulation. The ...
The gender gap is equally concerning: men are twice as likely to survive as women, while Black women had just a 5% chance — the lowest of any group. In all the cases, bystander CPR was given.
White men who received bystander CPR were 41% more likely to survive than if they didn’t receive CPR, while Black women had the lowest rate, with only a 5% greater chance of survival, than if ...
When a bystander performed CPR on someone, that person, on average, had a 28% greater chance of surviving than someone who didn’t receive CPR. advertisement Story by Eduardo Cuevas, USA TODAY ...
White men who received bystander CPR were 41% more likely to survive than if they didn’t receive CPR, while Black women had the lowest rate, with only a 5% greater chance of survival, than if ...
By Nia Mclean, CNN (CNN) — Survival rates for Black women are far worse after bystander CPR than for White men, according to a study published this month in the American Heart Association ...
White men who received bystander CPR were 41% more likely to survive than if they didn’t receive CPR, while Black women had the lowest rate, with only a 5% greater chance of survival, than if ...
White men who received bystander CPR were 41% more likely to survive than if they didn’t receive CPR, while Black women had the lowest rate, with only a 5% greater chance of survival, than if ...