J
Jo Kramer-Johansen
Researcher at Oslo University Hospital
Publications - 151
Citations - 5720
Jo Kramer-Johansen is an academic researcher from Oslo University Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cardiopulmonary resuscitation & Intensive care. The author has an hindex of 33, co-authored 138 publications receiving 5205 citations. Previous affiliations of Jo Kramer-Johansen include University of Chicago & Norwegian Air Ambulance.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Improving cardiopulmonary resuscitation quality to ensure survival.
TL;DR: Reporting cardiopulmonary resuscitation quality data should be standard in all studies of cardiac arrest as effects of studied interventions can depend on or influence cardiopUL pulmonary resuscitationQuality data are also valuable in quality improvement processes both in-hospital and out of hospital.
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Clinical pilot study of different hand positions during manual chest compressions monitored with capnography
Eric Qvigstad,Jo Kramer-Johansen,Øystein Tømte,Tore Skålhegg,Øyvar Sørensen,Kjetil Sunde,Theresa M. Olasveengen +6 more
TL;DR: Monitoring and optimizing chest compressions using capnography was feasible and could not demonstrate one superior hand position, but inter-individual differences suggest optimal hand position might vary significantly among patients.
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Development of the probability of return of spontaneous circulation in intervals without chest compressions during out-of-hospital cardiac arrest: an observational study
TL;DR: During pre-shock pauses in chest compressions mean probability of return of spontaneous circulation decreases in a steady manner for cases at all initial levels.
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A failed attempt to improve quality of out-of-hospital CPR through performance evaluation.
Theresa M. Olasveengen,Ann-Elin Tomlinson,Lars Wik,Kjetil Sunde,Petter Andreas Steen,Helge Myklebust,Jo Kramer-Johansen +6 more
TL;DR: The hypothesis was that providing CPR performance evaluation (CPR-PE) to three ambulance services would facilitate local education and implementation of CPR guidelines and, consequently, improve CPR quality.
Journal ArticleDOI
Improved Retention of Chest Compression Psychomotor Skills With Brief "Rolling Refresher" Training.
Dana Niles,Akira Nishisaki,Robert M. Sutton,Okan U. Elci,Peter A. Meaney,Kathleen A OʼConnor,Jessica Leffelman,Jo Kramer-Johansen,Robert A. Berg,Vinay M. Nadkarni +9 more
TL;DR: Retention of CC psychomotor skill quality is limited to 6 months after traditional basic life support recertification, and Rolling Refresher CC training can significantly improve retention of CC psychology skill retention.