scholarly journals Literature Review: Culture Care Applications in Family First Aid to The Patients With Heart Attack

Author(s):  
M. Mohtar
2019 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 268
Author(s):  
Abel Kurniawan ◽  
Made Sukana

Bounce Bali is one of the tourist attraction in Bali. It is located in Canggu Village, Kuta Utara District, Badung Regency. It offers an indoor trampoline activity. This sport has a potential risk. Therefore, it is essential to implement safety and healthy procedure. The types of data are qualitative. This research analyzes the primary and secondary source of data. Data are collected through an observation, interview, and literature review. They are discussed descriptively. Qualitative data analyzes are carried out to understand the aim of the research. The result of the study shows that Bounce Bali has been applied the safety and heathy procedure. They implement the standards of using the trampoline and provide the first aid facility. Keywords: Trampoline Tourist Attraction, Safety and Healthy Procedure, Bounce Bali


2020 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 90
Author(s):  
Suharto Suharto ◽  
Kipa Jundapri ◽  
Muchti Yuda Pratama

<p><em>The risk factors of cardivasculer’s diseases it was caused by high blood presure. High blood presure was a factor who caused by hypertention and if blood presure was uncontrolling its caused heart attack and heart failuare. Walking exercise is a submaximal test who recomended for maintenence systolic and dyastolic blood pressure for hypertention. Literature review was collecting from 2010-2019. Data was perfomanced by using CINAHL, Proquest, and Science Direct. </em><em>The r</em><em>esult</em><em> of this literature review was</em><em> obtained 30 articles related about walking exercise and hypertention. There was </em><em>five</em><em> articles who relevant with this criteria of the study. These articles used quantitative and qualitatif designs. </em><em>The c</em><em>onclusion</em><em> was </em><em>walking exercise can maintenance blood pressure.</em></p><p><strong><em>Keywords: </em></strong><em>w</em><em>alking </em><em>e</em><em>xercise, </em><em>b</em><em>lood </em><em>p</em><em>resure, </em><em>s</em><em>ystolic </em><em>d</em><em>yastolic<strong> </strong></em></p>


2019 ◽  
Vol 1 (3) ◽  
pp. 15-20
Author(s):  
Nurkholis Alfian ◽  
Rosa Eliviani ◽  
Irvan Kurnia Wicaksono Oey ◽  
Lucky Dwi Saputra ◽  
Nofri Wahyu Candra

Heart disease and blockage of blood vassel, especially coronary heart disease is the main cause of heart attack. Death due a heart attack often happens before the patient arrived to the hospital or a few minutes after a heart attack happens. The hearth attack is very difficult to known by people around the victim and can be known after the victim is passed away. Therefore to minimized the victim of late heart attack first aid treatment we made EmBand (emergency band) the bracelet that emits sos signal for people with heart disease. We expect emergency band can help people with heart disease as an emergency tools when heart attack ocurred or when the heart performance lower than usual to send emergency message to some relatives. The mothods that used in this activity are study of literature, system and design planning, also evaluation the success of the device. Based on the observation that had been done, the pulse sensor from the device have 70% accuracy from the real BPM that we compared with ECG. The first 30 seconds is the calibration phase of em band, and the next minute the device can detect pulse 70% accurate beat per minutes compared to the bpm from the ECG. Emergency band can be a medium for first aid for people with heart disease where it can send sos message to relatives when the heart beat in the danger condition.


2019 ◽  
Vol 34 (s1) ◽  
pp. s132-s132
Author(s):  
Rowena Christiansen

Introduction:Best practice first aid management of accidental hypothermia and cold injuries in the prehospital setting is relevant for disaster management in cold environments as well as for wilderness and expedition medicine, and space medicine. In the Australasian context, guidance is currently taken from the Australian Resuscitation Council (“ARC”) Guidelines dealing with these issues.Aim:To review and update the recommendations of the ARC Guideline 9.3.3 Hypothermia: First-Aid Management (February 2009) and ARC Guideline 9.3.6 Cold Injury (March 2000).Method: The review is being undertaken through a combination of a focused literature review and expert opinion. Through the author’s membership of the International Commission for Alpine Rescue (“ICAR”) Alpine Emergency Medicine Commission, two northern-hemisphere experts on hypothermia have reviewed the guidelines and provided commentary and recommendations.Results:Much of the literature around accidental hypothermia and cold injuries (including frostbite, frostnip, and chilblains), relies on expert opinion and case studies. There are relatively few randomized controlled trials, and these are often confined to the laboratory setting. As a result, there is a heavier reliance on expert opinion than in any other areas of medicine.Discussion:This presentation will summarize the current best practice recommendations for the first aid management of accidental hypothermia and cold injuries through combining the existing ARC Guidelines with key advances identified through the literature review, and the key management recommendations stemming from expert opinion. This will provide attendees with a cohesive set of clinical practice recommendations which can be used in the field.


Author(s):  
Georg Hossli ◽  
Christian Bühler

In summer, mountain accidents may include falls, causing contusions and open wounds; fractures and torn ligaments; external bleeding;internal bleeding in the head, thorax and abdomen; injuries to the spinal column and extremities; falling rocks causing skull injuries; and falls into crevasses causing additional hypothermia, frostbite and drowning. In winter, there are skiing accidents with fractures and torn ligaments; and avalanches resulting in asphyxia, hypothermia and frostbite. In addition, there are mountain sickness; pulmonary edema of high altitude; snow blindness; heatstroke; sunstroke; heart attack; diarrhea and vomiting; pneumonia; snakebite; drowning in torrents or lakes; and burns, explosions and cuts acquired in huts. First aid, medical support and transport to hospital may vary widely.


Author(s):  
Dinesh. K. R

India is one of the most populous countries of the world. Due to over population, ignorance of health has been remained the major problems in India. For every one minute a death, oops in because of heart attack. Ambulance service plays an important role in saving lives. Its primary purpose is to give first aid to the sick or injured people in the emergency scene. To save a life is auspicious as well as precious. The idea here is to provide an intelligent smart health system using some sensors and microcontrollers; it will sense the body condition and send the data to the collaborated hospital’s database. This proposed idea gives us the development of a wireless-based system for pulse rate, blood pressure and temperature monitoring to be used in ambulance. By this, the real time information can be passed to nearby hospitals to alert them about the critical conditions over IOT. This hardware device is fixed inside the ambulance to sense the patient’s health, collect the info during a wireless device called node MCU and immediately pass the database to the hospital’s server by the concept of IOT. This may intimate the hospital officials and should answer the required actions to be taken to the person in emergency.


1980 ◽  
Vol 18 (25) ◽  
pp. 100.2-100

This new book, written for people who wish to take an active interest in their health, explains how the heart works and what can go wrong with it and with the circulation. It emphasises that there is no single cause of coronary heart disease but rather a number of risk factors which can lead to trouble, particularly if several of them are present in one person. Smoking is high on the list and is the factor most directly within a person’s control. Other factors such as raised blood pressure, obesity, physical inactivity, and especially the possible effect of stress are examined in turn. Sensible recommendations which do not impose undue limitations on life-style are made in the hope of reducing the toll of heart disease. A final section describes first aid, treatment and rehabilitation following a heart attack.


2013 ◽  
Vol 20 (3) ◽  
pp. 91-106 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rachel Pizarek ◽  
Valeriy Shafiro ◽  
Patricia McCarthy

Computerized auditory training (CAT) is a convenient, low-cost approach to improving communication of individuals with hearing loss or other communicative disorders. A number of CAT programs are being marketed to patients and audiologists. The present literature review is an examination of evidence for the effectiveness of CAT in improving speech perception in adults with hearing impairments. Six current CAT programs, used in 9 published studies, were reviewed. In all 9 studies, some benefit of CAT for speech perception was demonstrated. Although these results are encouraging, the overall quality of available evidence remains low, and many programs currently on the market have not yet been evaluated. Thus, caution is needed when selecting CAT programs for specific patients. It is hoped that future researchers will (a) examine a greater number of CAT programs using more rigorous experimental designs, (b) determine which program features and training regimens are most effective, and (c) indicate which patients may benefit from CAT the most.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document