Abstract
Prehospital cardiac resuscitation is an integral part of emergency medicine, which provides the majority of field medical control. J. F. Pantridge and his associates moved cardiac resuscitation from the hospital to the scene of the patient's collapse in the late 1960s, markedly improving survival rates. Many of the prognostic indicators and principles of care apparent in the Belfast group's early results have been confirmed over the last 20 years.
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