Presentation Outline
Well in advance of your presentation, spend some time going through the easycpr.org website so that you know about Hands Only CPR and our project. We want to save lives and we need your help teaching people, so you need to feel comfortable with the technique. In addition, you are representing many important local
- rganizations and it is important that you are prepared and professional.
Arrive at least fifteen minutes early to your presentation. Introduce yourself to the person in charge and ask how much time they’d like to spend (many businesses will have a limited amount of time), think about how to keep within that timeframe. They will know that your presentation will take an absolute minimum of 10-15
- minutes. Familiarize yourself with the room and the computer/projector/internet resources available. Ideally,
you can use the easycpr.org website for much of your presentation. Finally, you’ll likely need a table to demonstrate compressions on.
- 1. Introduction
- a. Introduce yourself – name, training (if any), tell them you’re volunteering your time
- b. Introduce easycpr.org – Lincoln Fire & Rescue’s Hands Only CPR education project. Hands Only
CPR does not include mouth-to-mouth and is at least as effective as traditional CPR.
- i. Stat: Last year in Lincoln (2011), LFR attempted to resuscitate 169 cardiac arrest
- victims. Of those, only 21 survived – that’s only 12%. CPR can double or even triple a
person’s chances for survival.
- ii. Our goal is to increase the number of bystanders who attempt CPR when they witness a
cardiac arrest. Stat: Nationally, only 40-45% of bystanders give CPR when they witness cardiac arrest.
- iii. Led by Lincoln Fire & Rescue, includes broad coalition of Lincoln organizations and
businesses (website “sponsors” tab)
- c. Introduce the presentation
- i. 1-minute video (if computer/projector available)
- ii. Detailed hands-on demonstration
- iii. Questions
- iv. Optional Practice
- 2. 1-minute instructional video