Continue CPR until: 1: Medical help arrives 2: You cannot physically continue 3: They start breathing 4: The scene becomes unsafe 5: An AED becomes available to hook up to the victim.
1. You are physically unable to continue. Do not create a second patient by overexcerting yourself
2. The scene becomes unsafe. Again, you are of no help to the patient if something happens to you
3. A higher level of care arrives. Paramedics or other healthcare professionals take over from you. They may however ask you to continue CPR while they perform advanced maneuvers.
4. The patients pulse/breathing returns. If the patients pulse returns without breathing, continue rescue breathing. If the patient begins breathing, place the patient in the recovery position. Roll them onto their side (preferably left)
This depends entirely on your own capabilities. A short answer is that you should complete as many as you can with perfect form. When you break form (either due to lifting to heavy of a weight, or doing more reps than necessary) stop working the muscle as effectively and you increase your risk of injury.
It depends on your fitness level, but only a few reps are good for beginners.
There's no such thing as "toning" you have to build muscle if you want your body to be hard, not flabby. You *should* be doing about 3 sets of 6 reps at a high weight.
Infant, Child, Adult CPR all the same cycle/rate; 30 compressions, 2 breaths.
435 rep.
there are 435 reps in congress.
i believe that Hawaii has 2 "reps"
You should always to a series of sets and never just a quick workout. Have short breaths in between and do as many reps as you can without stopping. Around 3 sets are recommended.
burning fat.
For optimal results, it is recommended to perform 3 sets of 2 repetitions each for the keyword exercise "3 2 1 reps."
If you are looking for strength 3 sets of 6 -8 reps, for a toner look go for 10 -12 BUT with lighter weights. do 3 days a week.
it will build your muscle up as low weight with high reps will tone the muscle out.it wont build it.