dc.description.abstract | Cardiac arrest is the sudden cessation of the heart's effective pumping action.
This causes the circulation to stop. When circulation stops, it can cause death in a short time.
Cardiac arrest occurring in hospital is relatively common in COVID-19 patients and often
results in poor outcomes. Only a few critically ill patients with COVID-19 who experience
cardiac arrest survive CPR. The purpose of this review is to determine the quality of life in
COVID-19 patients with post-CPR cardiac arrest.
Method: The paper research was reviewed regarding their iclusion creteria and quality
assasment using the Joana Briggs Institute’s critical appraisal checklist. Three electronic
databases were used comprehensively to collect the sources. They are Pubmed (2017-
2022), Springerlink (2017-2022), and Sciencedirect (2017-2022). Articles were selected by
PRISMA 2020 flow diagram for systematic review.
Results: A total 10 studies were selected in this review. Factor affecting successful CPR in
Covid 19 pastient According to the results of the literature review, it was found that CPR
was successful in COVID-19 patients if the patient experienced ROSC with a duration of
between 6-20 minutes and the return of neurological function improved a decrease in the
quality of life of CPR patients with COVID-19 compared to CPR before the pandemic.
Conclusion: The conclusion from this summary is that there is a decrease in the success of
CPR in COVID-19 patients compared to CPR in non-COVID-19 patients, thus affecting the low
quality of life in COVID-19 patients who experience cardiac arrest. Through the results of
the literature review, it is hoped that it can be considered as one of the factors that can
increase the success of CPR in handling CPR in COVID-19 patients who experience cardiac
arrest. | en_US |