AHA Reinforces Visible Chest Rise and Avoiding Over-Ventilation

The 2025 adult BLS take-home messages reinforce that when ventilating an adult in cardiac arrest, rescuers should give enough tidal volume to produce visible chest rise while avoiding both hypoventilation and hyperventilation. The goal is controlled, effective ventilation rather than forceful or excessive breaths.

This point is easy to overlook, but it matters. Too much ventilation can be harmful, and too little ventilation can also reduce the quality of care. The AHA’s wording puts the focus back on practical observation: visible chest rise is the target, not oversized breaths or rushed bagging.

References
American Heart Association. Part 7: Adult Basic Life Support.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Troy Bowman
Troy has been the the VP and CFO of In-Pulse CPR since September, 2009. Troy is married to Mollie who is the owner and TCC for the company. Currently they have 7 children with several of them grown up. Troy enjoys outdoor activities including camping, hiking, and spending time with his family.

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