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UI study shows more hospitalized children surviving cardiac arrest

Published
2012.12.18
More children are surviving cardiac problems following a change in guidelines from the American Heart Association. (photo courtesy of MedPage Today)

More children are surviving in-hospital cardiac arrest than they did one decade ago, according to a University of Iowa-led study of data from hospitals using resuscitation guidelines from the American Heart Association. Story from: The Cedar Rapids Gazette

The Cedar Rapids Gazette

More children surviving in-hospital cardiac arrest

Children who had in-hospital cardiac arrest in 2009, were three times more likely to survive than children who had cardiac arrests in 2000. In addition, among surviving children, the risk of severe brain damage appears to have remained unchanged during this period. Story

Patients more likely to survive in-hospital cardiac arrest today

Image of a electrocardiogram (ECG / EKG), with human heart on screen.

A new study published Nov. 15 in the New England Journal of Medicine finds that patients who have a cardiac arrest in the hospital today are more likely to survive and to avoid neurological disability than they were 10 years ago. Story

Alumna overcame bacterial meningitis

Published
2012.03.04

While traveling abroad in 2002, finance major Amanda Richter was hospitalized with life-threatening bacterial meningitis. She returned to the UI that fall in a wheelchair, but after major surgeries and grafts, she can now walk again with a cane. “That's life. Story from: Chicago Daily Herald

Chicago Daily Herald
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