Im just gonna copy and paste my post from another thread…it might illuminate and take some fear and misinformation out of the difference between shocking a patient and pacing a patient…
MSH
NREMTP/Flight Medic and a bunch of other letters that mean nothing to most folks…
I am totally against the new protocol of rescue breaths…and personally think it was because people were less apt to perform cpr if they had to do mouth to mouth…and trust me from experience, having someone ralph in your mouf is not a day at the beach


But the brain and blood needs 02.
Doing CPR on frail people and children sucks, you hear and feel the chest and rib cartilage breaking and it is like, well, its like a horrible mixed feeling of knowing you’re hurting someone but also trying to save their life. Like having to do an IO (intraosseous infusion, think taking a corkscrew and trying to go through the leg bone of an infant to get to the center, not too far and just far enough to get a line flowing) IV line on an infant or being so desperate on an elderly patient, and having failed to get a line anywhere on their extremities opt for a carotid IV…each scenario is about a 1000% on the rectal pucker scale.
I heard about the count of the song Staying Alive, always cracked me up, mostly due to the irony…but after you go past being an EMT or Advanced EMT and become the Paramedic you sort of leave the mechanics (compression and respirations) to whomever crew\volunteers you have on hand because your so busy trying to intubate the patient and get a line going, getting the EKG pads on and trying to read a scribbly line from the monitor because CPR and that thing printing looks like a linear etch-a-sketch or getting pacing pads if needed all while packaging the patient on a body board with all the straps and wires and IV lines and a temperamental stretcher…and getting them to the truck…but it’s whether scoop and go on a trauma victim in which CPR is mostly useless or its a medical where you do have a shot at getting the patient back it still is a skill I would like to know but never haft to use again.
Also now there are so many AED’s about everywhere which is a good thing…most people don’t realize you do not shock a patient in asystole, contrary to almost every tv show out there…a flat line means no electrical activity, no current, nothing to shock.
V-Fib and some forms of A-FIb are shockable…and normally when a person is having a heart attack you have maybe a 3 minute window when the heart is going from chest pain ("Hey! I’m having troubles here!) to a fib then to a state of asystole.