Most people overestimate CPR success — real survival rates are far lower, especially outside the hospital. Out‑of‑hospital cardiac arrest survival in the U.S. is typically under 10%, while in‑hospital CPR survival averages 15–25%, depending on the cause and rhythm.
The Reality of CPR Survival Rates
Television has shaped a wildly inaccurate picture of CPR. On medical dramas, people collapse, receive a few chest compressions, gasp awake, and walk out of the hospital. In real life, CPR is far more complex — and its success rates are far lower than most people realize.
Out‑of‑Hospital Cardiac Arrest: The Harshest Numbers
When cardiac arrest happens outside a hospital, the odds are stacked against the patient. In the United States:
- Survival to hospital discharge is less than 10% for EMS‑treated out‑of‑hospital cardiac arrests (OHCA).
- The American Heart Association reports similar numbers, with 9.1% survival in recent national data.
- Globally, the median survival rate is about 10%.
Why so low? Several factors work against survival:
- Most arrests happen at home (70–73%), where bystanders may not be trained or prepared.
- Only about 40% of victims receive bystander CPR, even though immediate action is critical.
- Survival drops 10% for every minute without CPR or defibrillation.
Yet the biggest game‑changer is simple:
Bystander CPR Saves Lives
Immediate CPR can double or triple survival chances. When CPR is paired with an AED:
- Survival can reach 23–40%, and even 35% in some public AED‑use cases.
Witnessed arrests also fare better. If a bystander sees the collapse, survival jumps from 4.5% to 16%. If a first responder witnesses it, survival rises to 18%.
In‑Hospital CPR: Better, but Still Limited
Inside hospitals, survival improves — but not as much as people expect.
- 15–25% of patients survive to discharge after in‑hospital cardiac arrest (IHCA).
- Survival varies by rhythm:
- 34–35% for shockable rhythms (ventricular fibrillation or pulseless VT)
- ~10% for non‑shockable rhythms (asystole or PEA)
Even among survivors, neurological or functional decline is common, with about 25% experiencing reduced overall function after CPR.
Why CPR Still Matters
Despite the sobering statistics, CPR remains one of the most powerful emergency interventions available. The problem isn’t CPR — it’s delayed CPR.
The data is clear:
- Immediate action saves lives.
- Communities with strong CPR training programs have dramatically higher survival rates.
- Public access to AEDs is still too low, with bystanders applying them in only 12.6% of public arrests.
The Bottom Line
CPR is not a magic restart button — but it is the difference between life and death in many cases. The real survival rates may be lower than people expect, but they also show enormous potential: when ordinary people step in quickly, survival can rise from single digits to nearly 40%.
If more people learned CPR, recognized cardiac arrest quickly, and used AEDs without hesitation, thousands more lives could be saved every year.



















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