Title: Corrigendum to ‘Manual vs. integrated automatic load-distributing band CPR with equal survival after out of hospital cardiac arrest. The randomized CIRC trial’ [Resuscitation 85 (2014) 741–8]
Abstract: The authors regret that two names were missed from the Acknowledgements section in the original printed article. The section has been updated to include the omitted names in the online version, and appears below: The authors would like to acknowledge the EMS providers who contributed to this study as well as other individuals who made this study possible. We would specifically like to thank the following people for their contributions to the project: CIRC management and operation: Trial manager Jeff Jensen, Trial coordinators Marcia Hefner, Colin Thomas; Central Data management: Brian Baker, Wave Engineering; Ronald Pirrallo MD, MHSA and Guy Gleisberg, BS, NR-EMT Medical College of Wisconsin. Fox Valley Site Operations: Steve Krantz, Timothy J. Rodgers, Brian Scheer, and Ginny Wallace, Gold Cross Ambulance Service. Houston Site Operations: Derrick Clay, Jason Gander, Thomas Madigan, Bonnie Richter, and Elizabeth Turrentine, HCCR Inc. Hillsborough County Site Operations: Paul Costello, Hillsborough County Fire Rescue. Nijmegen Site Operations: Hans Luijten MD and Mieke Lückers-Meeuwisse, Radboud University Medical Center; Marco Pfeijffer and Wim Huijzendveld, RAV Gelderland-Zuid. Vienna Site Operations: Alexander Nürnberger, Medical University of Vienna; Michael Girsa and Wiener Rettung, Wiener Rettung. Medical Monitor: Ronald Pirrallo, MD, MHSA, Medical College of Wisconsin. Electronic ECG file review: Rune Gehrken, RN, Oslo University Hospital. The authors apologize for any inconvenience caused. Manual vs. integrated automatic load-distributing band CPR with equal survival after out of hospital cardiac arrest. The randomized CIRC trialResuscitationVol. 85Issue 6PreviewTo compare integrated automated load distributing band CPR (iA-CPR) with high-quality manual CPR (M-CPR) to determine equivalence, superiority, or inferiority in survival to hospital discharge. Full-Text PDF