Skip to main contentSkip to main content
You have permission to edit this collection.
Edit
Wahoo-Ashland-Waverly.com
64°
  • Log In
  • Subscribe
  • user icon Guest
  • Logout
Read Today's E-edition
  • News
    • Local
    • Ag News
    • Crime
    • State and Region
    • Education
    • Politics
    • Business
    • Nation & World
    • Markets & Stocks
    • News Tip
  • Obituaries
    • Share a story
    • Recent Obituaries
    • Find an Obituary
  • Sports
    • NE Prepzone
    • Big Red Today
    • Professional
  • Lifestyles
    • Arts & Theater
    • Event Calendar
    • Movies & TV
    • Music
    • Contests
    • Puzzmo
    • Games & Puzzles
    • Play
    • Food & Cooking
    • Home & Garden
    • Health
    • Parenting
    • Fashion
    • People
    • Pets
    • Travel
    • Faith
    • Announcements
    • Comics
  • Brand Ave. Studios
  • Print Edition
    • Wahoo E-Edition
    • Ashland E-edition
    • Special Sections
    • Market Weekly
    • Archives
    • Back Issues
  • Our Publications
    • The Ashland Gazette
    • Wahoo News
  • Public Notices
    • Wahoo Public Notices
    • Ashland Public Notices
  • Buy & Sell
    • Place an ad
    • Jobs
    • Cars
    • Classifieds
  • Shopping
  • Customer Service
    • Manage Wahoo Subscription
    • Activate Digital Subscription
    • Newsletter Signup
    • Subscribe
    • Contact Us
    • Manage Ashland Subscription
    • Manage Waverly Subscription
    • Help Center
  • Gift Subscription
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
© 2026 Lee Enterprises
Terms of Service | Privacy Policy
Wahoo-Ashland-Waverly.com
News+
Subscribe
Read Today's E-edition
Wahoo-Ashland-Waverly.com
News+
Subscribe
  • Log In
  • user icon
    Welcome, Guest
    • My Subscription
      Help Center
    • My Account
    • Dashboard
    • Profile
    • Saved items
    • Logout
  • E-edition
  • News
  • Obituaries
  • Sports
  • Puzzmo
  • Puzzles
  • Buy & Sell
  • Public Notices
  • 64° Fair
Share This
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Bluesky
  • WhatsApp
  • SMS
  • Email
CPR can double or triple a person’s chance of survival—here’s how it was developed
0 Comments
Share this
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Bluesky
  • WhatsApp
  • SMS
  • Email
  • Print
  • Save

CPR can double or triple a person’s chance of survival—here’s how it was developed

  • Aine Givens
  • Jun 3, 2022
  • Jun 3, 2022 Updated Dec 6, 2022
  • 0

ACLS Medical Training put together a timeline chronicling the long history of trying to revive victims of heart attacks or drownings, from methods used before the 19th century to modern-day CPR.

Before the 19th century: Varying methods from flagellation to bellows precede modern CPR

Before the 19th century: Varying methods from flagellation to bellows precede modern CPR

Our earliest written history traces basic attempts to resurrect someone who has just stopped breathing. References can be traced back to Egyptian mythology, as when Isis resurrected Osiris with “the breath of life,” for example. In the Book of Kings in the Old Testament, there is a description of the prophet Elisha saving a boy in part by placing his mouth over the boy’s mouth.

In 1530, Swiss physician Paracelsus may have tried using a bellows on a dead patient. The founder of modern anatomy, Andreas Vesalius, another 16th-century physician, also described making a hole in an animal’s trachea and blowing to inflate its lung, whereas Scottish surgeon William Tossach reported reviving a coal miner who had been felled by gasses.

hemro // Shutterstock

1868: First accounts of sternal compression recorded

1868: First accounts of sternal compression recorded

A 21st-century surgeon said an 1868 account of sternal compression by a doctor at the Royal Free Hospital in London “could equally be a present-day description of external cardiac massage.” The article in the Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine, titled “Modern cardiopulmonary resuscitation—not so new after all,” noted that the method described was likely an attempt at artificial respiration rather than heart compression. The patient breathed ammonia from a large sponge during the compression. However, the method was almost identical to what would be discovered almost 100 years later.

By the early 19th century, artificial breathing was overtaken by external compression, which was adopted as the best approach to revive someone after it was deemed dangerous to give someone air from which some oxygen had already been removed.

Maria Wan // Shutterstock

1933: William Kouwenhoven ‘accidentally’ develops modern CPR technique while researching external defibrillation

1933: William Kouwenhoven ‘accidentally’ develops modern CPR technique while researching external defibrillation

Dr. William Kouwenhoven, the founder of modern-day CPR, discovered the technique while he was researching heart defibrillation on a dog. Kouwenhaven realized that rhythmic pressure on the dog’s sternum could bring enough circulation to its brain. The pace needed was 36 kilograms of pressure every second. He reported that adequate circulation could be kept for 30 minutes with external compression. By 1960, he was able to show a 70% survival rate among 20 human patients who had gone into cardiac arrest.

Racha Phuangpoo // Shutterstock

1938: Vladimir Negovsky establishes first resuscitation laboratory in Moscow

1938: Vladimir Negovsky establishes first resuscitation laboratory in Moscow

Russian scientist Dr. Vladimir Negovsky established the first resuscitation lab in Moscow, which is pictured above with a nurse monitoring testing. There, he developed the ideas of terminal state, clinical death, post-resuscitation disease, and what he called reanimatology, the science of resuscitation. He focused on preventing the destruction of the central nervous system and restoring function after clinical death. During World War II, Negovsky created front-line resuscitation teams who were able to resuscitate soldiers. In 1959, his laboratory started mobile resuscitation teams in Moscow.

Bettmann // Getty images

1949: Red Cross invites CPR pioneers to evaluate techniques

1949: Red Cross invites CPR pioneers to evaluate techniques

The Red Cross asked a team of doctors including Dr. Archer Gordon to evaluate different methods of chest compression. Gordon, a heart specialist, found that applying pressure on the chest rather than the back was more effective. Gordon demonstrated that mouth-to-mouth resuscitation was better for children by using techniques which had been developed by Dr. Peter Safar, a pioneer in critical care medicine who had studied ways to resuscitate patients.

Ken Wolter // Shutterstock

1956: Mouth-to-mouth resuscitation deemed an effective method for life-saving techniques

1956: Mouth-to-mouth resuscitation deemed an effective method for life-saving techniques

For many years, Dr. Peter Safar studied techniques to resuscitate patients through exhaling into a patient's airways and his research would eventually show that mouth-to-mouth resuscitation is effective at saving lives. He and Dr. James Elam, who was an expert in the respiratory system and invented many types of ventilators, partnered to pioneer the steps of CPR such as how to lift a patient's chin and initiate rescue breathing. A year later, the U.S. military adopted mouth-to-mouth resuscitation as a technique to be used for emergency life support. 

pixelaway // Shutterstock

1960: First CPR training mannequin is created

1960: First CPR training mannequin is created

A life-sized training mannequin was designed to teach people how to perform CPR during training courses. The mannequin was a collaboration between Drs. Peter Safar, Archer Gordon, James Elam and Norwegian toymaker Åsmund Lærdal. More than 400 million people around the world have learned CPR skills in training courses, according to the American Heart Association.

The face of the mannequin, named Resusci Annie, was modeled after that of a teenage girl who drowned in Paris, the River Seine, in the late 19th century. Never identified, she became known as “L’Inconnue de la Seine,” the Unknown Woman of the Seine. 

JHU Sheridan Libraries/Gado // Getty Images

1974: Standards for CPR adopted by various medical organizations

1974: Standards for CPR adopted by various medical organizations

The American Red Cross and other organizations asked for training and performance standards for CPR. As a result, the National Academy of Sciences’ research council convened a conference. A second national conference for CPR and Emergency Cardiovascular Care, or ECC, took place in 1973. A year later, the American Red Cross along with the American Medical Association and the American Heart Association adopted “Standards for CPR,” written by Dr. Archer Gordon.

Tony Harris - PA Images // Getty Images

2010s: Hands-only CPR gains popularity for bystander use

2010s: Hands-only CPR gains popularity for bystander use

Hands-only CPR eliminates the need for a bystander to put their mouth in contact with someone they are trying to help. Medical professionals hope that by removing rescue breathing from the technique, more people will come forward to help.

Hands-only CPR can double the survival rate of someone experiencing cardiac arrest. Why does it work? According to the American Heart Association, when a teenager or an adult collapses as a result of cardiac arrest, their lungs and blood have enough oxygen for their vital organs as long as someone is doing chest compressions to pump blood to their heart and brain.

Africa Studio // Shutterstock
0 Comments

Related to this collection

CPR can double or triple a person’s chance of survival. Here’s how it was developed

CPR can double or triple a person’s chance of survival. Here’s how it was developed

If performed immediately, CPR can double or even triple your chances of surviving a cardiac arrest in your home (where 70% occur), out in public, or in a nursing home. 

Wahoo-Ashland-Waverly.com
  • Facebook
  • Twitter

Sites & Partners

  • Wahoo Newspaper
  • The Ashland Gazette
  • Waverly News
  • Wahoo Public Notices
  • Ashland Public Notices
  • Market Weekly
  • Newsletter Signup

Services

  • Manage Subscription
  • Rack Locations
  • About Us
  • Join Our Team
  • Licensing
  • Shopping
© Copyright 2026 Wahoo Ashland Waverly, 564 N. Broadway Wahoo, NE 68066
Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Advertising Terms of Use | Do Not Sell My Info | Cookie Preferences
Powered by BLOX Content Management System from bloxdigital.com.

You are logged in
 Switch accounts
Secure transaction. Cancel anytime. Have an account? Log In

Sign Up

Account processing issue - the email address may already exist

User information
This is the name that will be displayed next to your photo for comments, blog posts, and more. Choose wisely!
Your email address will be used to confirm your account. We won't share it with anyone else.
Create a password that only you will remember. If you forget it, you'll be able to recover it using your email address.
Confirm your password.
Have an account? Log In

You're all set!

Thank you .

Your account has been registered, and you are now logged in.

Check your email for details.

OK

Log In

Invalid password or account does not exist

Forgot your password?
Email me a log in link
Admin login Subscribe
Need an account? Sign Up

Reset Password

Submitting this form below will send a message to your email with a link to change your password.

Forgot Password

An email message containing instructions on how to reset your password has been sent to the email address listed on your account.

Email me a log in link

Promotional Offers

No promotional rates found.

Purchase Gift Purchase Access

An error occurred

Secure & Encrypted

What's your email address?
What's your name?
Who is this gift for?
Who is this gift from?
Delivery date
What's your billing location?
What's your delivery address?
Subtotal:
Total:
How would you like to pay?
Add New Card

Secure transaction. Secure transaction. Cancel anytime.

You're all set!

Thank you.

Your gift purchase was successful! Your purchase was successful, and you are now logged in.

A receipt was sent to your email.

OK

An error occurred

This offer is currently unavailable.