Extend your brand profile by curating daily news.

Updated Pediatric and Neonatal CPR Guidelines Emphasize Age-Specific Care

By Burstable Health Team

TL;DR

Healthcare professionals gain an advantage by implementing the updated CPR guidelines from the American Heart Association and American Academy of Pediatrics to improve pediatric and neonatal resuscitation outcomes.

The guidelines update pediatric and neonatal resuscitation techniques including compression methods, ventilation rates, and choking response protocols based on the latest scientific evidence.

These updated guidelines will save more infant and child lives by providing healthcare professionals with improved resuscitation techniques for cardiac emergencies.

New CPR guidelines reveal infants should receive back blows and chest thrusts for choking instead of abdominal thrusts which were previously recommended.

Found this article helpful?

Share it with your network and spread the knowledge!

Updated Pediatric and Neonatal CPR Guidelines Emphasize Age-Specific Care

The American Academy of Pediatrics and the American Heart Association have published updated guidelines for cardiopulmonary resuscitation and emergency cardiovascular care for newborn and pediatric populations. The "2025 American Heart Association and American Academy of Pediatrics Guidelines for Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation and Emergency Cardiovascular Care" mark a comprehensive update to the guidelines for pediatric basic and advanced life support and neonatal resuscitation since 2020. Every year, more than 7,000 out-of-hospital cardiac arrests and approximately 20,000 in-hospital cardiac arrests occur in infants and children in the United States. "Children are not little adults, and these guidelines offer specific recommendations that reflect the unique needs of children," said Javier Lasa, M.D., FAHA, FAAP, associate professor in critical care and cardiology at Children's Health in Dallas and volunteer co-chair of the 2025 Pediatric Advanced Life Support Writing Group.

The Pediatric Basic and Advanced Life Support guidelines are intended to be a resource for lay responders and health care professionals who provide care for infants and children in multiple settings. Highlights from the new pediatric guidelines include a single chain of survival intended to apply to adult and pediatric in- and out-of-hospital cardiac arrest, with continued emphasis on early recognition of cardiac arrest and early activation of emergency medical services. For infants with severe foreign body airway obstruction, or choking, repeated cycles of 5 back blows alternating with 5 chest thrusts are recommended, with abdominal thrusts not recommended in infants. For children with severe foreign body airway obstruction, repeated cycles of 5 back blows alternating with 5 abdominal thrusts are recommended. For infants, the recommended compression techniques include using either the one-hand technique or the two thumbs-encircling hands technique, while the use of two fingers along the sternum was eliminated due to ineffectiveness in achieving proper depth.

Henry Lee, M.D., FAAP, professor of pediatrics and neonatologist from the University of California San Diego and American Heart Association volunteer co-chair of the 2025 Neonatal Writing Group stressed the need for properly trained neonatal clinical care. "The guidelines also observe that one out of every 10-20 newborns each year needs help transitioning from the fluid-filled environment of the womb to the air-filled room," Lee said. While an updated unified chain of survival has been developed for adults and children, a separate new newborn chain of care was created that provides a framework for considering essential elements of the health care system relating to neonatal health. The newborn chain of care starts with prenatal care and extends to recovery and appropriate follow-up in the postnatal period to ensure optimal short- and long-term health for the infant and family.

Most newborn infants can be evaluated and monitored during deferred cord clamping for 60 seconds or more and can maintain skin-to-skin contact with a parent after birth, an increase from the previous recommendation of at least 30 seconds. Effective ventilation of the lungs remains the priority in newborn infants who need resuscitation. It is reasonable to provide ventilation at a rate of 30-60 inflations per minute in newborn infants, expanded from the prior recommendation of 40-60 inflations per minute. The updated guidelines and CPR training materials are available in U.S. and international English so first responders, clinicians and other learners can begin using the most current, science-backed resources immediately. These educational materials can be accessed at Pediatric Advanced Life Support and the Neonatal Resuscitation Program, 9th Edition.

Curated from NewMediaWire

blockchain registration record for this content
Burstable Health Team

Burstable Health Team

@burstable

Burstable News™ is a hosted solution designed to help businesses build an audience and enhance their AIO and SEO press release strategies by automatically providing fresh, unique, and brand-aligned business news content. It eliminates the overhead of engineering, maintenance, and content creation, offering an easy, no-developer-needed implementation that works on any website. The service focuses on boosting site authority with vertically-aligned stories that are guaranteed unique and compliant with Google's E-E-A-T guidelines to keep your site dynamic and engaging.