You may want to double-check your CPR skills. While it’s probably common knowledge not to take medical information from ...
Voice assistants like Google Assistant, Siri and Alexa can help with things like the weather and recipes, but what about CPR? Perhaps not so much, a new report showed. Only 59% of voice assistant ...
YouTube may be a great place to watch a dog play the accordion, but a new study suggests it's not the most reliable source for learning CPR (cardiopulmonary resuscitation). Researchers found that of ...
Checking for a pulse and giving rescue breaths are just some of the ways TV inaccurately depicts CPR for sudden cardiac ...
Television characters who experience cardiac arrest outside a hospital are more likely to receive CPR than people in real ...
Ardsley High School seniors Adeel and Amber Arif put their smartphones to especially good use recently when the twin siblings created the AHS CPR Simulator, a mobile-phone application, which will be ...
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - YouTube may be a great place to watch a dog play the accordion, but a new study suggests it's not the most reliable source for learning CPR (cardiopulmonary resuscitation).
Only 59% of voice assistant responses actually included information related to cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR), according to a study published Monday. Only about one third gave actual CPR ...