⚡ Sudden cardiac arrest takes ~350,000 American lives each year — survival can exceed 70% when a shock is delivered within 3 minutes. Get CPR + AED trained →
CPR + AED Together — why both matter for survival

CPR + AED Together — why both matter for survival

AED Best Brands Editorial Team

Independent AED research desk

Updated July 10, 2026
CPR + AED Together — why both matter for survival | AED Best Brands

The single biggest misconception about AEDs is that they substitute for CPR. They don’t — they complement it. The combination is the rescue triad: chest compressions maintain blood flow to the brain while the AED interprets and treats the underlying rhythm. Either alone produces dramatically worse outcomes than both together.

Quick answer
CPR and AED are complementary, not substitutes. Compressions maintain blood flow during analysis and between shock cycles. Defibrillation treats shockable rhythms. Patients who receive both within 3 minutes survive at ~70% rates per AHA. Patients who receive only one or neither see survival fall to ~20% or below.

What CPR does that an AED cannot

CPR (chest compressions + rescue breaths) maintains circulation of oxygenated blood to the brain and heart muscle during cardiac arrest. Without circulation, brain damage begins within 4 minutes and becomes irreversible within 8–10 minutes (AHA). The AED’s rhythm analysis pause (5–10 seconds) and 2-minute cycle-time both depend on CPR continuing in between — without compressions, the patient is dying while the AED works.

What an AED does that CPR cannot

CPR alone does not restart a stopped heart or terminate ventricular fibrillation. CPR maintains the patient long enough for a defibrillating shock to be delivered. The AED is the only device that can interpret rhythm and deliver the shock energy required to convert ventricular fibrillation back to a sustainable rhythm.

Survival outcomes with both vs each alone

Intervention received Approx survival rate Note
CPR + AED within 3 minutes ~70% Best case — combination effect
CPR alone (no AED) ~10–15% Compressions maintain perfusion but cannot defibrillate
AED alone (no CPR) ~30% Defibrillation works but no perfusion between shocks
Neither ~5–10% EMS-arrival-only baseline

Note: survival rates vary significantly by patient profile, witnessed vs. unwitnessed event, and time-to-EMS. Numbers above reflect average ranges across published studies.

How CPR + AED training actually works

AHA Heartsaver CPR + AED certification covers both interventions in a single ~30-minute course (or longer for in-person practice). Most public-access AED programs require designated responders to hold current certification. Renewal cycle is 2 years.

Standard training covers: when to begin CPR, compression rate and depth, how to apply AED pads, what to do when the AED says “no shock advised,” and how to coordinate roles in a multi-rescuer setting. Available through providers like CPR1 for individuals and teams.

Compression rate and depth per AHA 2020 guidelines

Patient Rate Depth
Adult 100–120 compressions/min 2.0–2.4 inches (5–6 cm)
Child (1 year – puberty) 100–120 compressions/min ~2 inches (5 cm) or ⅓ chest depth
Infant (under 1) 100–120 compressions/min ~1.5 inches (4 cm) or ⅓ chest depth

Frequently asked questions

Do I need CPR training to use an AED?

No. AEDs are designed for untrained bystander use. But CPR training meaningfully improves rescue outcomes.

What’s the survival rate with just CPR (no AED)?

~10–15% depending on patient profile. Compressions maintain perfusion but cannot defibrillate.

How often should I renew CPR + AED certification?

Every 2 years, per the AHA Heartsaver standard.

Can I learn CPR online?

Yes, for the educational component, but most certifications require an in-person skills assessment. CPR1 offers blended online + in-person options.

What is hands-only CPR?

Compressions without rescue breaths. AHA endorses hands-only CPR for untrained bystanders or rescuers uncomfortable giving rescue breaths.

Is CPR + AED training tax-deductible?

For business buyers, yes — typically deductible as employee training expense. For individuals, it may qualify as a medical expense per IRS Publication 502.

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Educational content. Not a substitute for hands-on training. In a medical emergency, call 911.

In this guide

Contextual pick · One date
Heartsine Samaritan PAD 450P Products
HeartSine 450P

Pads + battery in one 4-year cartridge, ~$169. The maintenance plan that survives turnover.

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References · primary sources

  1. ClinicalAmerican Heart Association. CPR Facts and Stats. cpr.heart.org facts
  2. ProgramAmerican Heart Association. Implementing an AED Program, 2023 guide (placement, pediatric guidance, readiness). cpr.heart.org AED guide (PDF)
  3. RegulatoryUS FDA. Automated External Defibrillators and Premarket Approval database. fda.gov AEDs
  4. ManufacturerZOLL Medical. AED Plus and AED 3 product and consumables documentation. zoll.com AEDs
  5. ManufacturerPhilips. HeartStart OnSite and FRx support, pads and battery IFU. philips.com emergency care
  6. ManufacturerStryker. HeartSine Samaritan PAD and Pad-Pak documentation. stryker.com emergency care
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