TY - GEN N2 - Hands-on defibrillation (HOD) is the practice of providing uninterrupted chest compression during the delivery of defibrillator shocks. The practice of HOD may be safer than traditionally thought and improve outcomes by minimizing interruptions to compressions, but adopting such a change in long-established protocols would require healthcare provider buy in. This research project investigates the attitudes of first responders and medical directors on the matter. DO - 10.6083/n870zr53b DO - DOI AB - Hands-on defibrillation (HOD) is the practice of providing uninterrupted chest compression during the delivery of defibrillator shocks. The practice of HOD may be safer than traditionally thought and improve outcomes by minimizing interruptions to compressions, but adopting such a change in long-established protocols would require healthcare provider buy in. This research project investigates the attitudes of first responders and medical directors on the matter. AD - Oregon Health and Science University T1 - The effect of an educational seminar on medical director and first responder attitudes surrounding the practice of hands-on defibrillation DA - 2020 AU - Adler, David L1 - https://digitalcollections.ohsu.edu/record/8245/files/David-Adler.pdf PB - Oregon Health and Science University PY - 2020 ID - 8245 L4 - https://digitalcollections.ohsu.edu/record/8245/files/David-Adler.pdf KW - Emergency Responders KW - Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation KW - Physician Executives KW - Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice KW - seminars KW - first responders KW - hands-on defibrillation KW - safety KW - chest compression TI - The effect of an educational seminar on medical director and first responder attitudes surrounding the practice of hands-on defibrillation Y1 - 2020 L2 - https://digitalcollections.ohsu.edu/record/8245/files/David-Adler.pdf LK - https://digitalcollections.ohsu.edu/record/8245/files/David-Adler.pdf UR - https://digitalcollections.ohsu.edu/record/8245/files/David-Adler.pdf ER -