How to Use the Life Safe CPR Coach App: Complete Tutorial
AI-powered real-time CPR feedback using your phone’s camera. Set up in 30 seconds, practise in 10 minutes, and keep your skills sharp between courses.
You took a CPR course, passed the test, and left feeling confident. But three months later, could you remember the exact compression rate? Six months later, would your hand placement be right? Research consistently shows that CPR skills begin to decline within weeks of training — and by the time most people recertify (every 3 years in Canada), their technique has degraded significantly.
That is the problem the Life Safe CPR Coach app was built to solve. Using your phone’s camera and AI-powered hand tracking, the app gives you real-time feedback on your compression technique as you practise at home. No manikin required. No classroom needed. Just you, a pillow, and 10 minutes.
What the CPR Coach App Does
The CPR Coach uses your phone’s front or rear camera to track your hand movements in real time as you perform chest compressions. The AI analyses each compression and provides instant feedback on the three metrics that determine whether CPR is effective:
Compression Depth
Measures how deep each compression goes. For adult CPR, the target is 5–6 cm (2–2.4 inches). The app tells you if you are pushing too hard, too soft, or just right.
Compression Rate
Tracks your speed in real time. The target is 100–120 compressions per minute. The app provides audio or visual cues to help you stay in the zone.
Consistency
Measures how uniform your compressions are over time. Consistent depth and rate throughout a CPR session is just as important as hitting the targets on individual compressions.
Full Recoil
Detects whether you are allowing the chest to fully return to its resting position between compressions. Leaning on the chest between pushes prevents the heart from refilling with blood.
Getting Started: Setup in 30 Seconds
1Open the app
Visit lifesafe.ca to download or access the CPR Coach. The app works on most modern smartphones with a camera.
2Set up your practice surface
You need a firm surface to compress against. A firm couch cushion, a folded towel on the floor, or a pillow placed on a hard surface all work well. If you have a CPR training manikin, that is ideal — but the app is designed to work without one.
3Position your phone
Prop your phone upright so the camera can see your hands and the practice surface. Lean it against a wall, book, or use a phone stand. The camera should be roughly level with your hands — about 30 to 60 cm (1 to 2 feet) away. The app will show you a preview of what the camera sees and confirm when your hands are detected.
4Start a session
Tap the start button and begin compressions. The app will track your technique in real time and provide feedback through on-screen indicators and optional audio cues.
Understanding the Feedback
The app provides continuous feedback during your session. Here is what to watch for and how to improve:
“Too shallow” / depth indicator in the red zone: You are not pushing deep enough. This is the most common issue, especially when practising on a soft surface. Focus on using your body weight rather than arm strength — lock your elbows, position your shoulders directly above your hands, and compress from your core. If your practice surface is too soft, switch to a firmer cushion or add a hardback book underneath.
“Too fast” or “Too slow” / rate indicator off target: Aim for 100–120 compressions per minute. If you find yourself drifting, try compressing to the rhythm of a song at approximately 100 BPM. The app may provide a metronome or audio guide to help you lock into the right tempo.
“Incomplete recoil” / recoil indicator flagging: You are leaning on the practice surface between compressions. Make a conscious effort to lift your weight completely between each push. Your hands should stay in contact with the surface, but your body weight should not be resting on it during the upstroke.
Consistency score dropping: Fatigue is usually the cause. As you tire, compressions tend to become shallower and slower. This is exactly what happens during real CPR — knowing your fatigue point helps you prepare. In a real emergency, switch rescuers every 2 minutes to maintain effective compressions.
Recommended Practice Routines
The 10-Minute Monthly Refresher
This is the minimum effective practice for maintaining your skills between courses. Set a monthly reminder on your phone and commit to this short routine:
- 2 minutes of continuous compressions — focus on rate and depth
- 30-second rest — review your feedback scores
- 2 minutes of compressions — focus on full recoil and consistency
- 30-second rest
- 2 minutes of 30:2 cycles — practise switching between compressions and pausing for imaginary rescue breaths (count to 2 during each pause)
- Review your session summary and note areas to improve next time
The Pre-Course Tune-Up
Do this a few days before your recertification course to shake off the rust:
- Three rounds of 2-minute compression sets with 1-minute rests
- Focus on one metric per round (depth, then rate, then recoil)
- End with 5 minutes of 30:2 cycles to simulate a full CPR scenario
The New Parent Confidence Builder
If you have just taken a course and want to lock in your skills before baby arrives:
- Practise for 10 minutes, three times during the first week after your course
- Then once a week for the next month
- Then once a month ongoing
This spaced repetition pattern is backed by research on skill retention — frequent practice early on, tapering to maintenance intervals, produces the strongest long-term retention.
How the App Complements In-Person Training
The CPR Coach app is not a replacement for a certified CPR course. Here is what each provides and why both matter:
What in-person training provides that the app cannot: Correct hand placement on an anatomically accurate manikin. Rescue breath technique, including head tilt, chin lift, and mouth-to-mouth seal. Airway management and AED use. Instructor feedback on the subtleties of your technique. Certification and legal qualification to perform CPR.
What the app provides that the classroom cannot: Ongoing practice between courses — available anytime, anywhere. Real-time metric tracking over weeks and months, so you can see skill decay and correct it. No scheduling, no travel, no cost per session. The ability to practise in the exact setting where emergencies happen: your home.
Together, they form a complete training cycle: learn the skills in a classroom, maintain them with the app, and recertify every 3 years to stay current with the latest guidelines.
Tips for Getting the Most Out of the App
- Good lighting matters. The AI hand tracking works best in well-lit environments. Practise near a window during the day or under bright indoor lighting.
- Keep the camera steady. A phone that shifts during your session will produce inconsistent tracking. Use a stable prop or phone stand.
- Wear contrasting clothing. The hand tracking algorithms work best when your hands contrast with the background. Avoid dark gloves on a dark cushion.
- Track your progress over time. The app saves your session history so you can see trends. Are your depth scores improving? Is your consistency getting better? Use this data to focus your practice on your weakest metric.
- Set a recurring reminder. The biggest barrier to practice is simply forgetting. A monthly phone reminder takes two seconds to set up and keeps you on track indefinitely.
Frequently Asked Questions
How does the Life Safe CPR Coach app work?
It uses your phone’s camera and AI-powered hand tracking to monitor your CPR compressions in real time, providing feedback on depth, rate, consistency, and recoil.
Do I need special equipment?
No. A firm pillow or cushion works as a practice surface. The app uses your phone’s built-in camera — no additional sensors or manikins required.
Can the app replace a hands-on CPR course?
No. The app supplements in-person training by helping you maintain skills between courses. A certified course with an instructor and manikins remains essential for learning proper hand placement, rescue breaths, and earning certification.
How often should I practise?
A 10 to 15 minute session every 4 to 6 weeks is the recommended minimum to maintain your technique. Even brief practice sessions help prevent skill decay.
Is the CPR Coach app free?
Visit lifesafe.ca for the latest pricing and availability.
Learn the Skills, Then Keep Them Sharp
The CPR Coach app keeps your technique between courses. But first, you need a course. Life Safe’s CPR Level C covers infant, child, and adult CPR with real-time feedback manikins — the foundation the app builds on.
Find a class near you: Toronto • Downtown Toronto • East York • Hamilton • Welland • Guelph
