Cardiopulmonary resuscitation is a life-saving procedure that is done when a child’s breathing or heartbeat has stopped which may happen after drowning, suffocation, choking, or an injury. The procedure involves chest compressions that keeps the child’s blood circulating and rescue breathing that provides oxygen to a child’s lungs. CPR must be continued until the child’s heartbeat and breathing return, or the arrival of trained medical help as permanent brain damage or death can occur within minutes if a child’s blood flow stops. The life-saving procedure is best administered by someone trained in an accredited CPR course from a certified training site such as the AHA certified CPR Memphis in Tennessee. Everyone from parents to those who take care of children should learn infant and child CPR if they have not already. Time is crucial when dealing with an unconscious child who’s not breathing as permanent brain damage begins only after four minutes without oxygen resulting in deat...