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While the battle to pass health care reform formally ended months ago, new reports and state actions have mystified patients and kept the debate alive.

The new federal health care law will save about $8 billion by the end of 2011 and $757 billion by 2020, according to a new administration report. Medicare spending will rise by 5.3 percent a year on average over the next decade, compared to 6.8 percent without the cuts; Medicare Advantage will be cut about $5.3 billion through 2011. About $8 billion will be saved through 2020 with a new program that will reduce hospital re-admissions caused by infections.

Some states have thrown down legal gauntlets. A Virginia court today ruled that Virgina can sue the government over the law, claiming that Congress violated the Constitution with the law’s provision that all Americans buy health insurance by 2014 or pay a fine. Missouri residents will vote tomorrow on whether to invalidate the same provision. According to the New York Times, a recent Missouri statewide poll did not favor that move. Arizona and Oklahoma will host similar votes in November, and 22 states have filed lawsuits.

Older Americans seem most concerned with the law, and the least informed. The National Council on Aging surveyed 636 men and women over 65 and found many did not know specific benefits of the program including one free doctor visit each year and that the new law will gradually increase prescription drug coverage.

Do you find the new health law confusing to administer or to understand your new benefits?

While the battle to pass health care

A 911 call alone may not be enough to save a life, but simple, clear and quick directions from the operator could do it. Two new studies have found 911 callers and bystanders instructed by operators to use simple CPR on cardiac arrest sufferers, without mouth-to-mouth, were more likely to attempt it and thus save more lives.

Only about six percent of people struck with sudden cardiac arrest outside hospitals survive. When bystanders perform CPR, which provides enough oxygen to the brain to last before emergency care arrives, that number jumps to 12 percent. With instruction from 911 operators, bystanders are more likely to perform the process, according to previous studies.  They’re even more apt to do so if operators instruct them to use the hands-only version, these new studies found — 80 percent of people will attempt it, 10 percent more than if operators instruct them to use the mouth-to-mouth version.

Unless enrolled in a lifeguard, babysitting or emergency health class, the average person today remains unlikely to know the process. 911 operators then serve a critical role in instructing bystanders, boosting survival odds especially in the time it takes paramedics to arrive on the scene.

Here’s a quick run-down of CPR, with the mouth-to-mouth step included (just in case), offered by the American College of Emergency Physicians Association (and video below).

  • Recognize signs of cardiac arrest: an absence of heartbeats, blood flow and pulse. When blood stops flowing to the brain, the person becomes unconscious and stops regular breathing. If a person has collapsed, determine if the person is unconscious. Gently prod the victim and shout, “Are you okay?” If there is no response, shout for help. Call 911 or your local emergency number. If the person is not lying flat on his or her back, roll him or her over, moving the entire body at one time.
  • Think ABC — Airway, Breathing, and Circulation.
    • Airway
      • Open the person’s airway. Lift up the chin gently with one hand while pushing down on the forehead with the other to tilt the head back. (Do not try to open the airway using a jaw thrust for injured victims. Be sure to employ this head tilt-chin lift for all victims, even if the person is injured.) If the person may have suffered a neck injury, in a diving or automobile accident, for example, open the airway using the chin-lift without tilting the head back. If the airway remains blocked, tilt the head slowly and gently until the airway is open.
      • Once the airway is open, take five to 10 seconds (no more than 10 seconds) to verify normal breathing in an unconscious adult, or for the existence or absence of breathing in an infant or child who is not responding.
      • If opening the airway does not cause the person to begin to breathe, it is advised that you begin providing rescue breathing (or, minimally, begin providing chest compressions).
    • Breathing (Rescue Breathing)
      • Pinch the person’s nose shut using your thumb and forefinger. Keep the heel of your hand on the person’s forehead to maintain the head tilt. Your other hand should remain under the person’s chin, lifting up.
      • Inhale normally (not deeply) before giving a rescue breath to a victim.
      • Immediately give two full breaths while maintaining an air-tight seal with your mouth on the person’s mouth. Each breath should be one second in duration and should make the victim’s chest rise. (If the chest does not rise after the first breath is delivered, perform the head tilt-chin lift a second time before administering the second breath.) Avoid giving too many breaths or breaths that are too large or forceful.
    • Circulation (Chest Compressions)
      • After giving two full breaths, immediately begin chest compressions (and cycles of compressions and rescue breaths). Do not take the time to locate the person’s pulse to check for signs of blood circulation.
      • Kneel at the person’s side, near his or her chest.
      • With the middle and forefingers of the hand nearest the legs, locate the notch where the bottom rims of the rib cage meet in the middle of the chest.
      • Place the heel of the hand on the breastbone (sternum) next to the notch, which is located in the center of the chest, between the nipples. Place your other hand on top of the one that is in position. Be sure to keep your fingers up off the chest wall. You may find it easier to do this if you interlock your fingers.
      • Bring your shoulders directly over the person’s sternum. Press downward, keeping your arms straight. Push hard and fast. For an adult, depress the sternum about a third to a half the depth of the chest. Then, relax pressure on the sternum completely. Do not remove your hands from the person’s sternum, but do allow the chest to return to its normal position between compressions. Relaxation and compression should be of equal duration. Avoid interruptions in chest compressions (to prevent stoppage of blood flow).
      • Use 30 chest compressions to every two breaths (or about five cycles of 30:2 compressions and ventilations every two minutes) for all victims (excluding newborns). You must compress at the rate of about 100 times per minute.
      • Continue CPR until advanced life support is available.
      • [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fHMOswPk3ug&hl=en_US&fs=1]
        Photo credit: Frederick MD Publicity via Flickr Creative Commons

A 911 call alone may not be

Tune in to Healthstyles tomorrow, Friday, July 30th, from 1:00 to 1:55 PM on WBAI, 99.5 FM, for an interview I conducted with Rosemary Gibson, lead co-author (J. P. Singh) of the new and important book, The Treatment Trap. Rosemary is a former senior program officer for the Rober Wood Johnson Foundation and has authored other works on health care quality and safety, notably the book Wall of Silence: The Untold Story of Medical Mistakes that Kill and Injure Millions of Americans.

The Treatment Trap is probably her most provocative work. She provides a critical analysis of the “green monster”–our out-of-control, expensive, unsafe health care system. The book is well documented and includes personal stories of patients’, families’, and providers’ experiences with overscreening, unnecessary treatment, adverse effects from that treatment, and even death. She also provides an historical context for the birth and nurturing of this monster, along with ways to control it. During the interview, she discusses these issues and provides listeners with strategies to reduce their own risk of being the victim of unnecessary treatment.

Don’t miss this interview. She’s right on track with what’s wrong with health care and why the new health care reform law won’t fix it. And check out her blog, The Treatment Trap. She’d love to hear from people about their own experiences with these issues.

Diana J. Mason, PhD, RN, FAAN

Rudin Professor of Nursing

Tune in to Healthstyles tomorrow, Friday, July