Part 2: International Collaboration in Resuscitation Science

2010 
With the founding of the International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation (ILCOR) in 1992, an international collaboration of clinicians and researchers was convened to identify, evaluate, and interpret the most valid resuscitation science. This supplement to Circulation (simultaneously published in Resuscitation ) presents the results of ILCOR's most recent and extensive efforts to reach consensus on interpretation of resuscitation science and treatment recommendations. ILCOR continues to strive to reach a common goal of universal resuscitation guidelines. Building on the 2005 International Consensus on CPR and ECC Science With Treatment Recommendations ,1,2 the 2010 International Consensus Conference held in Dallas, Texas, in February 2010 involved 313 experts from 30 countries. During the 2 years leading up to this conference, over 350 worksheet authors reviewed several thousand relevant, peer-reviewed publications to address more than 400 specific resuscitation questions, each in standard PICO (Population, Intervention, Comparison, Outcome) format. The experts reviewed, summarized, and categorized several thousand relevant, peer-reviewed publications into level of evidence grids, proposed consensus on science statements, and where possible, provided evidence-based treatment recommendations.3 Key knowledge gaps were also identified and documented, with the purpose of stimulating further research in those areas. Ultimately scientific consensus was achieved by continuous discussion and debate in multiple face-to-face meetings and webinars, and finally through focused discussions of the evidence evaluation worksheets during the 3 days of the International Consensus Conference. Particular attention was paid to recognizing applicable advances in resuscitation science, while managing potential conflicts of interest among participants and identifying topics that lacked good evidence to support or change current practice. The year 2010 marks the 50th Anniversary of cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR). The original reports of rescue breathing,4 closed-chest compressions,5 and the effective combination of the two6 created an immediate demand for CPR training and resuscitation guidelines. In …
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