WAY TO GO SKIER 1!!!
The focus on compression first (CAB) in CPR is twofold.
1. People don't want to do mouth-to-mouth on strangers and they found people were doing nothing at all, so comrpessions were focused on and lay rescuers CPR is taught as compression only.
2. CPR courses are not created with avalanche victims as their primary. The reason that the vast majority of adults suffer cardiac arrest is due to a heart attack, so the heart stops but there is considerable oxygen in the blood. The goal is to temporarily support the heart and brain by circulating that oxygenated blood and chest compressions actually create some ventilation.
Avalanche victims usually suffer cardiac arrest due to asphyxiation (there are 3 types) so their blood is oxygen depleted. You have to get oxygen into the blood (and CO2 out) with breaths AND circulate it with compressions. (In this case Skier 1 made it so Skier 2 could breath again before Skier 2's heart stopped - nick of time!!!).
So, take a pro CPR class and carry a CPR barrier in your BC med kit. I carry and recommend a numask because it is lighter/smaller/easier than a facemask in the cold mountains:
https://www.rescue-essentials.com/numask-cpr-mask/
https://www.chinookmed.com/01632/num...r-kit-iom.html
http://www.numask.com/
Part 2: Compression with Pulse Bad? Sometimes in avalanches...
Well generally unneeded compressions aren't good and the patient complains about it... but that is better than having a brain dead patient who needed compression and didn't get them.
But you mentioned cold body and cold fingers. There is a special case when dealing with avalanche victims who were buried longer than an hour: they are assumed to be hypothermic. Hypothermic patients can have very slow very weak pulses, so we teach people to take a carotid pulse for a full minute with an adequately warm/sensitive finger because they might have a weak pulse of 30. WE DO NOT WANT TO DO COMPRESSIONS if they have a pulse because hypothermia also makes the heart very "irritable" so compressions might send them from a HR of 30, which was maintaining them in their metabolic icebox, into a lethal arrhythmia and then CPR is definitely required! This is why we move hypothermic patients very gently and recheck their vitals frequently. HOWEVER, we also don't want a rescuer to fail to provide compressions on someone who needs it (is pulseless) just because they may be hypothermic! Is the pulse you "feel" in the patient their own? Or was that your pulsing fingertips? (That happens!)
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