Adrian Angel Inchauspe
National University of La Plata, Argentina
Keynote: Health Care Current Reviews
K-1 Yongquan complementary resuscitation maneuver, systematized since 1987, has been consistently performed in sudden death and cardiac arrest conditions as a final resource in both basic and advanced CPR failure. Experimental analytical studies identify the prevention, control and assessment of treatments set up as well as the determination of their efficiency offering; in that way, there are more possibilities than risks during the trial period. That type of study refers to the random criterion in order to measure differences and, in that way, it establishes causal associations which may better determine the intervention mechanism. As inferred by this criterion, control groups would not profit from the benefit of providing a second chance by means of the proposed maneuver during rescue. Such determination leaves those included in the control group deserted to their own ill-fate, adding??consequently??a certain lethal risk, which should basic and advanced CPR fail. In view of this panorama, we tried to find a methodology that should ensure the validation process according to the model presented. Such apparently simple consideration??thanks to the Cohort Retrospective model??manages to efface the high possibility of a ??fatal damage?, as proposed by the randomness principle upon a prospective non-intervention group. The scientific methodology that supports the efficiency of the maneuver derives mainly from the sustained increase in survival rates presented in the successive statistics published since its application.
Biography Adrian Angel Inchauspe has completed his graduation from Medical Sciences in La Plata University in 1986 and currently is a Surgery Professor in quoted School of Medicine. He is the Surgeon for Dr. Rodolfo Rossi Hospital in La Plata and Dr. Ignacio Pirovano Hospital in Buenos Aires; he develops as Member of the Investigation Department in Dr. Alejandro Korn Hospital, La Plata. He is certified in Laparoscopic Surgery in Aachen and Tubingen Universities since 1991 and in Telesurgery Louis Pasteur University - Strasbourg in 1994, and was chosen for the Argentina National Invention Award in 1998. He is a Teacher in the Argentina Acupuncture Society and Session Chairman of several International Discovery Science and Chinese Medical Congresses, he was proposed as Invited Foreigner Professor in National China Academy of Sciences. He is the Editorial Member and Reviewer in several medical journals; he has been searching about Yongquan resuscitation since 30 years.
Email:adrian.inchauspe@yahoo.com.ar