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by bone_frequency 1400 days ago
I specially agree with the two first reasons listed in the article. I do have certified first aid and CPR training but the wellbeing of my family comes first, I am not going to get charged with attempted rape and/or cancelled because I wanted to be a good samaritan.
1 comments

I've done a lot of searching after reading this article and I couldn't find a case where a man was charged with a crime or canceled for performing CPR or using an AED.

The closest I could find was this case in Japan, where someone was let go by police the minute he told them he was using an AED (https://japantoday.com/category/national/man-revives-woman-w...).

It doesn't matter if there is evidence or not, if statistically, women are treated less the issue is real and there needs to be a social/public push to make it appropriate.

There needs to be a law similar to good Samaritan that allows for men to touch women during CPR without fear of reprisal.

Those laws exist in almost every state, where Good Samaritan laws specify that consent to CPR is implied if a victim is unresponsive. Consent is implied for children who are unresponsive if their parent is not present. https://americancpr.com/blog/tag/good-samaritan-act-good-sam...

States should add those laws where they are absent and clarify them where they are vague.

Thanks for this!