I selected the 3rd option, I know you will give the details at the end but would be nice if you can grade it! :
1) You will check the Pulse on the left arm to ascertain if they have a Pulse...but they probably shouldn't as they are not breathing (right?)!
2. If they have stopped breathing you would first press on their stomach in case something is stuck in their diaphragm Or to remove waste in their lungs so you can give him/her the breath of life.
3. When you are breathing into them you will hold their nose and grip his chin in order to ascertain air is going into him/her.
repeat 2-3 until the individual breaths or accept that his/her time has come.
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the new guidelines are really simplified so you don't bother with any of those things, you'll see if something is lodged in someone if you give two breaths and their chest doesn't rise, it is NOT recommended that you remove something from anyone's throat as you might actually further lodge it down, if they are actively chocking or you are a witness to the event then you must perform the Heimlich maneuver, which you can refer to in the sight above.. otherwise you just simply follow the three step wise process without complicating it at all..
1- check for response, if none then call 911
2- tilt the head up open the airway and listen for breath
3- close the nose and open the mouth give two breaths and thirty compressions continuously until help arrives.. pause every two mins to see if the person comes to, if they do then title them to the side, if they don't then keep at it..
4- if you are a witness to a cardiac arrest and you ARE TRAINED then you can make a fist and strike the patient only once between the nipple line, if nothing happens then you continue CPR as before..
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Jazak Allah, It guess it is simple once you put it like that but performing it under pressure is another thing altogether. Have you experienced this?
:wa:
any way whats ACLS/BCLS ? honestly I don't know !!!
Great thread!
I have a book on first aid but haven't studied it much.
i think you have to make sure the clothes are loose & check his/her throat to make sure nothing is stuck in it? not sure about this. I guess i should study it as this is very important.
That was quite useful. Thanks for posting.
Skye, at my last CPR training one of the community nurses told how she had recently come across a man who required CPR. She told us how she looked at the face of this stranger and felt repulsed at the thought of putting her mouth to his - she said that she was surprised to find herself feeling like that, because she hadn't expected it ...
Luckily a mask was available, and it was no problem.
It left us talking as a group about how to deal with such a situation if there is no mask or nothing similar to a mask available.
The trainer said that many people would be hesitant to give mouth-to-mouth to another adult, and that such a feeling is not uncommon.
She also said that if mouth-to-mouth was not an option (for whatever reason), then just doing compressions was still better than nothing, because through the compressions alone at least some air gets sucked into the lungs and then circulated.
What is your opinion on this?
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