Gendy Gendacee retweetou
Gendy Gendacee
3.3K posts

Gendy Gendacee retweetou
Gendy Gendacee retweetou

@Sage_medics I can throw a vacutaner with needle and hit this from 10 feet!
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Gendy Gendacee retweetou
Gendy Gendacee retweetou
Gendy Gendacee retweetou

The E.P is 3 songs deep now
1. Lord I'm here youtu.be/RLkzBLBYF5o
2. My Soul Magnifies Lord
youtu.be/DtNyznvzDOM
3. Rejoice in the name of the Lord (Yet to be released)
Yet to be recorded.
4. Blessed Assurance
5. Hallelujah
1. Intro: Declaration of faith
2.Outro: Bow your head

YouTube

YouTube
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Gendy Gendacee retweetou

Gendy Gendacee retweetou
Gendy Gendacee retweetou
Gendy Gendacee retweetou
Gendy Gendacee retweetou
Gendy Gendacee retweetou
Gendy Gendacee retweetou
Gendy Gendacee retweetou
Gendy Gendacee retweetou

Twin telepathy is real! They have their own secret language and it’s pure joy.👶👶
Full video: 👉gturl.jp/QgUvs
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Gendy Gendacee retweetou
Gendy Gendacee retweetou
Gendy Gendacee retweetou

The research behind this is wild. A baby is born and doesn't breathe. The window to fix it is 60 seconds. Doctors call this window the Golden Minute. And the first rule on the protocol is don't rush, because rushing actively breaks the technique.
Roughly 1 in every 10 babies needs help breathing right after they're born. The American Heart Association and American Academy of Pediatrics worked out the exact sequence years ago, and it's the playbook used in hospitals around the world.
Step one is the simple part: dry the baby, keep them warm, tilt the head a little to open the airway, rub the back, flick the soles of the feet. About 10% of newborns just need that small nudge to start breathing on their own.
If 60 seconds go by and the baby still isn't breathing, or the heart is going slower than 100 beats a minute, you grab a bag and mask. The bag is a rubber bulb. You squeeze it, and air pushes through the mask into the baby's lungs. You can see this in the second clip. Around 5% of all newborns need it. If it's working, the baby's heart speeds up. About 30 seconds later, you check again. If the heart is still under 60 beats a minute, you start chest compressions. Only about 1 to 3 babies out of every 1,000 ever reach that stage.
The bag and mask has one weak point. It only works if the mask seals tight against the baby's face, with no gaps at the rim. If air escapes around the edges, none of it reaches the lungs. The whole effort is just for show. A 2014 study at Leiden University in the Netherlands had medical staff try the technique on a training dummy. Inexperienced people leaked 51% of the air on their first attempt. After two minutes of focused practice, that number dropped to 11%. The seal is the whole thing, and shaky hands wreck it.
The calm in that video is what lets the hands stay steady. A steady hand keeps the seal tight, while a shaky one breaks it. Cochrane is the body that writes the most authoritative medical reviews in this field. Their review on this calls getting the air in cleanly the single most important step in saving a non-breathing baby. A panicking person with a bad seal might as well not be in the room.
Training does the rest. The NIH cites a study from Zambia where they trained midwives and nurses in this exact protocol. Out of every 1,000 babies born, the number who died in their first week dropped from 11.5 to 6.8. About a 41% drop, just from people learning to follow the steps in the right order without freaking out.
Around 900,000 babies a year die from not starting to breathe at birth, per the WHO. Most of those deaths come down to two things: no trained person on hand, or someone trained who rushed. The slow walk in the video is the technique. Slow hands and a steady mask save more babies than any other thing on the checklist.
N𝕖𝕙𝕕𝕦𝕞@onlyCFrancisco
Baby back to life, no panic no rush, a professional who is aware of his duties. Remarkable
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