Asked by rebkekah
Which of the following depicts the actual differences in CPR for an adult, child, and infant?
Give an adult or child 30 chest compressions before the two rescue breaths and an infant 15 chest compressions before the two rescue breaths.
Start CPR first before calling for help in adults and call for help first before starting CPR in children.
The depth of compressions for an adult is 2 to 2.4 inches. For a child above one year is 2 inches, and for infants, 1.5 inches.
None of the above
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
The third option.
AHA guidelines: compression depth — adults at least 2.0 in (5 cm) but not more than 2.4 in (6 cm); children (≥1 year) about 2 in (5 cm); infants (~<1 year) about 1.5 in (≈4 cm, ~1/3 AP chest depth).
AHA guidelines: compression depth — adults at least 2.0 in (5 cm) but not more than 2.4 in (6 cm); children (≥1 year) about 2 in (5 cm); infants (~<1 year) about 1.5 in (≈4 cm, ~1/3 AP chest depth).
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