International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation


The International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation was formed in 1992 to provide an opportunity for the major organizations in resuscitation to work together on CPR and ECC protocols. The name was chosen in 1996 to be a deliberate play on words relating to the treatment of sick hearts – "ill cor".
ILCOR is composed of the American Heart Association, the European Resuscitation Council, the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada, the Australian and New Zealand Committee on Resuscitation, the Resuscitation Councils of Southern Africa, the Resuscitation Councils of Asia and the Inter American Heart Foundation.

Mission statement

"To provide a consensus mechanism by which the international science and knowledge relevant to emergency cardiac care can be identified and reviewed. This consensus mechanism will be used to provide consistent international guidelines on emergency cardiac care for Basic Life Support, Paediatric Life Support and Advanced Life Support. While the major focus will be upon treatment guidelines, the steering committee will also address the effectiveness of educational and training approaches and topics related to the organisation and implementation of emergency cardiac care. The Committee will also encourage coordination of dates for guidelines development and conferences by various national resuscitation councils. These international guidelines will aim for a commonality supported by science for BLS, ALS and PLS."

Objectives

The objectives of ILCOR are to:
ILCOR meets twice each year usually alternating between a venue in the United States and a venue elsewhere in the world. ILCOR produced the first International CPR Guidelines in 2000, and revised protocols in 2005. A total of 281 experts completed 403 worksheets on 275 topics, reviewing more than 22000 published studies to produce the 2005 revision.
A further update appeared in 2015
The standard revisions cycle for resuscitation is five years. The next is therefore scheduled to be in 2020.