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CPR Training Bottle is a CPR awareness and training project from Japan. Its core idea is to use a common plastic water bottle to simulate the resistance of chest compressions, combined with a human-shaped training sticker, so ordinary people can practice basic CPR movements at home, in schools, or in the community. The text specifically recommends using an empty 550 ml Suntory Tennensui bottle or a 2 L bottle half-filled with water, and states that the concept was proposed by Coaido Inc., which has applied for intellectual property rights.
The project is not focused on a structured online course, but rather on “first-aid knowledge explanations + physical practice aids.” The website explains the basic CPR process: confirm safety and responsiveness, call for help and arrange for 119 and an AED, check breathing, continue compressions at the center of the chest, and follow the voice instructions once the AED arrives. It also uses measurement data to explain compression force: pressing a training manikin’s chest down by 5 cm requires about 50 kg of load, while compressing an empty 550 ml Suntory Tennensui bottle to about 2 cm thick can serve as a practice reference.
The text only mentions that the human-shaped training sticker can be purchased from the FastAid Online Shop, but it does not disclose the price, payment methods, or delivery coverage. There is also no indication of certification, a completion certificate, or official first-aid credentials after finishing the course. Therefore, it should not be regarded as a substitute for formal first-aid certification courses provided by organizations such as the Red Cross, fire departments, or the AHA.
Its advantages are its low barrier to entry and strong replicability. It turns the abstract concept of “compression depth and force” into the visible deformation of a water bottle, making it suitable for reducing the public’s unfamiliarity with CPR. The page also cites Japan’s Fire and Disaster Management Agency, the Tokyo Fire Department, and research from The Lancet to emphasize the importance of bystander CPR in improving survival rates. Its limitations are that training effectiveness depends on a specific bottle shape, the content is mainly in Japanese, and it lacks systematic instruction, instructor feedback, assessment, and certificates.
It is suitable for people with no CPR experience, basic family first-aid education, school life-safety classes, and corporate or community awareness activities. If the goal is to obtain a first-aid certificate recognized by institutions, formal offline training is still necessary. The text does not provide information on direct access to the website from mainland China, and some videos rely on YouTube, so the actual learning experience may be limited.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on cpr-training-bottle.com official site.
cpr-training-bottle.com is an Japan Health provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach cpr-training-bottle.com directly.