Department of Emergency Medicine, Children's Hospital of Orange County, CA (S.K.S.).
Department of Biostatistics and Informatics, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora (J.D.R.).
Circ Cardiovasc Qual Outcomes. 2024 Apr;17(4):e010249. doi: 10.1161/CIRCOUTCOMES.123.010249. Epub 2024 Mar 27.
Women who suffer a witnessed out-of-hospital cardiac arrest receive bystander cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) less often than men. To understand this phenomenon, we queried whether there are differences in deterrents to providing CPR based on the rescuer's gender.
Participants were surveyed using a national crowdsourcing platform. Participants ranked the following 5 previously identified themes as reasons: rescuers are afraid to injure or hurt women; rescuers might have a misconception that women do not suffer cardiac arrest; rescuers are afraid to be accused of sexual assault or sexual harassment; rescuers have a fear of touching women or that their touch might be inappropriate; and rescuers think that women are faking it or being overdramatic. Participants were adult US residents able to correctly define CPR. Participants ranked the themes if the rescuer was gender unidentified, a man, and a woman, in variable order.
In November 2018, 520 surveys were completed. The respondents identified as 42.3% women, 74.2% White, 10.4% Black, and 6.7% Hispanic. Approximately half (48.1%) of the cohort knew how to perform CPR, but only 7.9% had ever performed CPR. When the rescuer was identified as a man, survey participants ranked fear of sexual assault or sexual harassment and fear of touching women or that the touch might be inappropriate as the top reasons (36.2% and 34.0% of responses, respectively). Conversely, when the rescuer was identified as a woman, survey respondents reported fear of hurting or injuring as the top reason (41.2%).
Public perceptions as to why women receive less bystander CPR than men were different based on the gender of the rescuer. Participants reported that men rescuers would potentially be hindered by fears of accusations of sexual assault/harassment or inappropriate touch, while women rescuers would be deterred due to fears of causing physical injury.
与男性相比,目击院外心脏骤停的女性接受旁观者心肺复苏术(CPR)的频率较低。为了了解这种现象,我们调查了基于施救者的性别,施救者在提供 CPR 时是否存在不同的阻碍因素。
使用全国众包平台对参与者进行调查。参与者根据以下 5 个先前确定的主题对原因进行排名:施救者害怕伤害或伤害女性;施救者可能存在女性不会发生心脏骤停的误解;施救者害怕被指控性侵犯或性骚扰;施救者害怕接触女性或他们的触摸可能不适当;施救者认为女性在假装或过于戏剧化。参与者是能够正确定义 CPR 的美国成年居民。参与者以不同的顺序对施救者性别不明、男性和女性进行主题排名。
2018 年 11 月,完成了 520 项调查。受访者中女性占 42.3%,白人占 74.2%,黑人占 10.4%,西班牙裔占 6.7%。大约一半(48.1%)的参与者知道如何进行 CPR,但只有 7.9%的人曾经进行过 CPR。当施救者被确认为男性时,调查参与者将性侵犯或性骚扰的恐惧以及害怕接触女性或触摸可能不适当列为前两个原因(分别占 36.2%和 34.0%的回应)。相反,当施救者被确认为女性时,调查受访者报告称,担心伤害或受伤是首要原因(41.2%)。
公众对为什么女性接受的旁观者 CPR 比男性少的看法因施救者的性别而异。参与者报告说,男性施救者可能会因担心被指控性侵犯/骚扰或不当触摸而受阻,而女性施救者则会因担心造成身体伤害而受阻。