Cardio First Angel CPR Helper $250 Delivered @ DefibsPlus

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The CPR helper ensures quality CPR. The CLICK-CLACK is an audible sound providing consistent compression quality depth and force, keeping the heart and brain functioning with oxygenated blood until help - defibrillator arrives.

The CPR helper buys you time. Carry with you on holidays in your sports bag, in the car and/or at home.

Early intervention in the event of a Sudden Cardiac Arrest can improve survival rates by 89%. Quality CPR can double or
triple the chance of survival.

The CPR Helper can be used as a training device to practice the CPR technique.

The CPR Helper builds confidence, removes fear when panic impairs poor decision making especially the fear of not knowing what to do, fear of harming and fear of touching skin on skin especially with women.

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Comments

  • this is madness, if you need a cpr device in order to perform a cpr correctly, then you're doing it wrong. -trained CPR provider

    • +1

      This would be a great learning tool and investment for low frequency settings such as camps, schools, or gyms. Doing the half day once a year on CPR, vs that + something like this* onsite so people can practice throughout the year would give you 2 very different levels of proficiency.

      It boggles my mind that we think 3 hours in a year is enough for something so important, however basic it is.

      Not to mention the quality of provider/instructor varies a lot too, this allows standardisation.

      The device can probably be manufactured cheaply and sold even cheaper than $250* but the device itself is a good idea IMO. Especially if used as a learning and reinforming tool. I don't think it's worth a neg on the post unless there are cheaper options available.

      Edits: *

  • +3

    Just put a Trouble™ board game on their chest when you're compressing.

    • +1

      Combine with Hungry Hungry Hippos for an efficient multi-player CRP experience.

  • WTH sounds like high heels

  • +3

    cannot neg this hard enough

    in addition to being an insanely bald-faced ripoff price, it's stupidly impractical and more likely to result in an injury than cpr without

    • -2

      Lol. Results in injury? Are you aware effective CPR snaps a persons ribs. Whoever is first on the chest gets to feel twig like snaps as the ribs break to bits.

      • +3

        it can break ribs. it's not a given.

        • You are correct.

          And Mr Fox is wrong.
          It’s not a given.

          Yes more likely on granny but still not a given.

    • -1

      Ignoring the pricing issue (which I don't disagree with, as this, and even actual defibs are very expensive for what they realistically are), it is a bit impractical but if you're someone who doesn't perform CPR regularly, or struggle under pressure, this device could be a godsend. Can't tell you how many times I've seen CPR performed and the depth hasn't been enough (simply due to a lack of training, or experience), ditto if you're performing CPR solo and you're experiencing fatigue after doing it for several minutes. 90% of the time you will break bones. But, better being alive and having to heal a broken rib than be dead.

      • as this, and even actual defibs are very expensive for what they realistically are

        This is not a medical device. This is a cynical scam item marketed to people who equate spending money to being prepared.

        If you believe use of this product can in anyway alleviate fatigue or/and cause an untrained person frantically attempting to revive someone to use more correct technique then you're a rube, pure and simple.

  • +3

    It's not even on sale.

  • +3

    Sorry, no Oz-Ad.

  • -2

    Thank you for all your comments this product has been designed by a Cardiologist.

    Most people don't carry out correct depth of compression and don't realise how critical CPR is for effective defibrillation and how important it is to keep the heart muscle pumping especially for brain perfusion.

    It is a self coaching device rand can be use to practice to remind you how important it is to carry out quality CPR and how hard it is. Within 4-6 months after formal training allot people lose confidence on how to carry out CPR as they forget what to do

    We have found it very popular for travelling around Australia and carrying it in sporting bags. The key is timing. If you can act immediately with a tool that can improve performance and confidence in CPR you are more than half-way to help save a life.

    • +1

      this item is oriented to training (as you've alluded to here) and likely was intended to sell to nursing labs and the like.

      were i in a position to make purchases for training equipment i would not be surprised to see an item like this in the catalogue though i can tell you i would under no circumstances be adding any to the order.

      i would be very surprised if anyone with any experience would think this a good piece of equipment and am willing to bet that this is the reason you all are shilling it here on ozb – because your customers recognised it for the useless junk it is and you now need to offload onto the general population.

      good luck with that, cowbye

    • +1

      This device that clicks when you reach a certain pressure is still a gimmick, plain and simple. One click per compression doesn’t come close to providing the detailed, real-time feedback needed to perform high-quality CPR. Effective CPR requires consistent depth, correct rate, full chest recoil, and proper hand positioning—none of which this device measures or guides.

      Claiming it was designed by a cardiologist doesn’t automatically make it effective or reliable. If this product truly had solid clinical backing, there would be published evidence proving it improves CPR outcomes. Without that, the “cardiologist endorsement” sounds more like a marketing ploy than a meaningful validation.

      If you want to help people save lives, invest in proven training tools that offer comprehensive feedback, not a cheap clicker that risks giving users a false sense of security and potentially harms patients by encouraging substandard CPR.

  • -1

    We appreciate everyone's feedback, we have never been shy of any objections. We are not trying to off load this but rather give people tools to make them more confident to respond to a highly stressful life threatening situation. If ozbargains is not the platform we are more than happy to withdraw, it was recommended to us to help get the message out there and glad to see such a great discussion around this much appreciated

    • how does fiddling with some janky-ass boggle mechanism help a person (either the patient or the person administering cpr)?

      it doesn't help. It'll give the person burdened with a very difficult task and a very unfortunate situation just one more shtty detail to wrestle with.

      i'd be willing to bet that if this device was used and an adverse event took place (by adverse event i mean even something as simple as a wrist sprain) then your company would be liable.

      reflect on that as you see your orders dribble in.

  • +1

    to perform effective CPR you need to do 100 compressions per minute and push down around one third of chest height. This device with a static spring rate will not help with any of this. The pressure required for a big chunky person compared to a skinny kid varies greatly. This device is dangerous. Oh and it is $250… seriously wtf?

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