Barriers and facilitators to delivering bystander cardiopulmonary resuscitation in deprived communities: a systematic review.
Isabelle UnyKathryn AngusE DuncanF DobbiePublished in: Perspectives in public health (2022)
We found little evidence suggesting that the willingness to perform or learn bystander CPR is lower in deprived communities compared to the general population. However, the confidence to perform CPR in deprived communities was affected by some measures of socioeconomic status. The results also crucially highlighted other barriers more acute in deprived communities: the risk to personal safety in administering CPR; the fear of legal consequences; and the lack of community cohesion and other cultural barriers.