When you are too exhausted to continue, or when medical help arrives.
Answer this question… A. When a person has stopped breathing on his or her own
If you are CPR certified, you should have someone call 911 while you start CPR. If you are not CPR certified, find someone around you that is.
You should stand back as the AED analyzes the patient.
When their heart has stopped beating.
The statement is false. CPR should only begin if the patient has stopped breathing or if their heart has stopped beating. While it is likely that a choking victim has ceased breathing if they have lost consciousness, it is not an absolute indicator.
In CPR class you will learn how to resuscitate an individual who has stopped breathing. It is extremely important because proper CPR can save someone's life.
Code means someone is not breathing or their heart has stopped (which is not breathing as well). Full code CPR is probably a medical term for performing CPR on a patient that has coded. There is not, per se, a term for CPR that is a "full code CPR". You can take CPR for the lay person or professional.
CPR should be performed if a person is unconscious and not breathing
No. CPR is for when the heart has stopped beating.
The acronym should be all caps: CPR.
You would only administer CPR if the person does not have a pulse or (at a slightly lower place on the chest) if you knew/believed the person was choking. Otherwise, if the person has a pulse but is not breathing, you should administer rescue breaths.
The likely word is "interrupted" (stopped in progress).