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Chain of Survival (What Must Happen Fast)

A 2-minute supporting reference you can open now and carry into the next practice step.

Survival drops with every minute without CPR/defibrillation. Systems must remove delay so people can act immediately.

Practice after reading
2 minActPublicRES-021
You are on the Schools pathway. Use this resource as support, then return to the next public action.

Open the support, keep the next move clear

Survival drops with every minute without CPR/defibrillation. Systems must remove delay so people can act immediately.

What this resource covers

Use it to lock in one point, one sequence, or one team reminder without opening a full lesson shell.

Best next move

Map your location's "time to AED" (walk time + access barriers).

Keep the reference short and usable

Read the key points, then carry one clear takeaway into the next public rep.

Key points

  • Recognize early, start CPR early, use an AED early.
  • Each step reduces time-to-action.
  • Readiness is a system, not a poster.

Reference

The chain of survival is a time-based system:

1) Recognize cardiac arrest and call emergency services. 2) Start CPR. 3) Get an AED and follow its prompts.

The practical question for any location is: how many minutes does it take to get pads on a patient and start CPR? Readiness work is reducing that time by removing friction (signage, access, training coverage, and clear roles).

Return to practice before team follow-up

Map your location's "time to AED" (walk time + access barriers). Use the resource takeaway in one drill or guide before asking for team follow-up.

  1. Open one item
  2. Keep what helped
  3. Ask only when ready
Recommended nextCheck yourself

Use this as the next public action after the resource.

Keep for later
Team follow-up

Use this only when the public step is ready to become a team rollout.

Educational content only. Follow local protocols and device prompts. In an emergency, call emergency services.

Chain of Survival (What Must Happen Fast)