# Cardiopulmonary resuscitation in Brazilian medical television shows: a descriptive and quality assessment study

**Authors:** Eduardo Messias Hirano Padrao, Fernando Onuchic, Monaliza de Almeida Castro, Ariadne Peres Silva Swarovsky, Augusto Barreto do Amaral, Felippe Lazar, Luciano César Pontes Azevedo, Fernando Godinho Zampieri, Caio de Assis Moura Tavares

PMC · DOI: 10.62675/2965-2774.20250228 · Critical Care Science · 2025-05-13

## TL;DR

This study found that Brazilian TV shows inaccurately depict CPR, showing better patient outcomes than real life.

## Contribution

The study provides a descriptive and quality assessment of CPR depictions in Brazilian medical TV shows.

## Key findings

- Television shows showed a 44.1% survival rate, higher than real-world data.
- Favorable neurological outcomes were shown in 42.4% of TV cases.
- Adherence to guidelines did not significantly affect survival outcomes on TV.

## Abstract

To assess the accuracy of Brazilian television depictions of cardiopulmonary arrest, their management, and outcomes and to compare the observed outcomes with prior data from observational studies.

Investigators screened episodes, identified cardiac arrest scenes, collected relevant information, and assessed outcomes. Cardiac arrest scenes were then analyzed using the American Heart Association guidelines. The primary outcome was survival with favorable neurologic outcomes. Secondary outcomes were the return of spontaneous circulation and the number of Advanced Cardiovascular Life Support deviations in each event.

Fifty-nine cardiac arrests were included in the study. Death occurred in 55.9% of patients, and return of spontaneous circulation was obtained in 54.2%. Survival rate was 44.1%, and 42.4% of the patients had favorable neurologic outcomes. Adherence to Advanced Cardiovascular Life Support guidelines did not demonstrate a significant impact on survival with favorable neurological outcomes, as evidenced by comparable odds ratios (0.86 [95%CI 0.22 - 2.36] for 3 - 5 deviations and 0.69 [95%CI 0.07 - 5.93] for ≥ 6 deviations using 0 - 2 deviations as reference). Television shows depicted a significantly higher proportion of favorable outcomes than real-world Brazilian cohorts for out-of-hospital and in-hospital scenarios (50% versus 20.5%, p = 0.107; and 43.3% versus 17.4%, p < 0.0001, respectively).

In Brazilian television shows, the portrayal of cardiopulmonary resuscitation is inaccurate and tends to overstate the likelihood of favorable outcomes following cardiac arrests.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** cardiac arrest (MONDO:0000745)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Death (MESH:D003643), Cardiac arrest (MESH:D006323)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

36 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12266834/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12266834