First Aids Choking - Copia

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    While Waiting professional help

    If the Person Is Conscious but Not Able to Breathe or Talk:

    1. Give Back Blows

    Give up to 5 blows between the shoulder blades with the heel of yourhand.

    2. If Person Is Still Choking, Do Thrusts

    If the person is not pregnant or obese, do abdominal thrusts:

    Stand behind the person and wrap your arms around the waist. Place your clenched fist just above the persons navel. Grab your fist

    with your other hand. Quickly pull inward and upward. Continue cycles of 5 back blows and 5 abdominal thrusts until the

    object is coughed up or the person starts to breathe or cough. Take the object out of his mouth only if you can see it. Never do a

    finger sweep unless you can see the object in the person's mouth.

    If the person is obese or pregnant, do high abdominal thrusts:

    Stand behind the person, wrap your arms them, and position your handsat the base of the breast bone. Quickly pull inward and upward.

    Repeat until the object is dislodged.

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    3. Give CPR, if Necessary

    If the obstruction comes out, but the person is not breathing or if the personbecomes unconscious:

    For a child, start CPR for children.

    If youre alone with a child or baby who is unresponsive and notbreathing (or only gasping), call for professional help after youve done2 minutes of cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR).

    If someone else is present, shout for the person to call for professionalhelp and locate an AED (a defibrillator) right away while you begin CPR.

    If a child or baby is unconscious but you see regular breathing, call forprofessional help and wait for help. A breathing child or baby does notneed CPR, but one that is gasping does.

    3.1. Check to see if the child is conscious.

    Make sure you and the child are in safe surroundings. Tap the child gently. Shout, Are you OK?" Look quickly to see if the child has any injuries or medical problems.

    3.2. Check Breathing

    Place your ear near the childs mouth and nose. Is there breath on yourcheek? Is the childs chest moving?

    3.3. Begin Chest Compressions

    If the child doesnt respond and isnt breathing: Carefully place child on back. For a baby, be careful not to tilt the head

    back too far. If you suspect a neck or head injury, roll baby over,moving entire body at once.

    http://firstaid.webmd.com/cardiopulmonary-resuscitation-cpr-for-childrenhttp://firstaid.webmd.com/cardiopulmonary-resuscitation-cpr-for-children
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    For a baby, place two fingers on breastbone, For a child, place heel ofone hand on center of chest at nipple line. You also can push with onehand on top of the other.

    For a child, press down about 2 inches. Make sure not to press on ribs. For a baby, press down about 1 1/2 inches, about 1/3 to 1/2 the depthof chest. Make sure not to press on the end of the breastbone. Do 30 chest compressions, at the rate of 100 per minute. Let the chest

    rise completely between pushes. Check to see if the child has started breathing. Continue CPR until emergency help arrives.

    3.4. Do Rescue Breathing

    To open airway, lift childs chin with one hand. At the same time, tilthead by pushing down on forehead with other hand. Do not tilt the headback if the child may have a neck or head injury.

    For a child, cover mouth tightly with yours. Pinch nose closed and givebreaths.

    For a baby, cover mouth and nose with your mouth and give breaths. Give child two breaths, watching for chest to rise each time. Each

    breath should take one second.

    3.5. Repeat Compressions and Rescue Breathing if Child Is Still NotBreathing

    Two breaths can be given after every 30 chest compressions. Ifsomeone else is helping you, you should give 15 compressions, then 2breaths.

    Continue this cycle of 30 compressions and 2 breaths until the childstarts breathing or emergency help arrives. If you are alone with the child and have done 2 minutes of CPR (about 5cycles of compressions and breathing), call for professional help andfind an AED.

    3.6. Use AED as Soon as Available

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    For children under 9 years old, use a pediatric automated externaldefibrillator (AED), if available. If a pediatric AED is not available, or forchildren age 1 and older, use a standard AED.

    Turn on AED. Wipe chest dry and attach the pads.

    The AED will give you step-by-step instructions. Continue compressions and follow AED prompts until emergency help

    arrives or the child starts breathing.

    For an adult, start CPR for adults.

    3.7. Check Responsiveness

    Tap the person's shoulder and shout, "Are you OK?" Look for normal breathing. Call for professional help if there is no

    response. Start hands-only CPR. Hands-Only CPR should not be used for adults whose cardiac arrest

    is due to drug overdose, near-drowning, or an unwitnessed cardiacarrest. In these cases, do a conventional CPR combination of chestcompressions and rescue breathing.

    3.8. Do Chest Compressions

    Place the heel of your hand on the center of the person's chest. Place the heel of your other hand on top of your first hand, lacing

    fingers together.

    Keep arms straight and your shoulders directly over your hands. Push hard and fast, compressing chest at least 2 inches. Let chest rise completely before pushing down again. Compress at least 100 times per minute.

    http://firstaid.webmd.com/cardiopulmonary-resuscitation-cpr-treatmenthttp://firstaid.webmd.com/cardiopulmonary-resuscitation-cpr-treatment
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    3.9. Stop Only if:

    The person starts breathing normally. A trained responder or emergency help takes over.

    You are too exhausted to continue. There is an automated external defibrillator (AED) to use.

    3.10. Use an AED As Soon As It's Available

    Turn on the AED. It will give you step-by-step instructions. Wipe chest dry. Attach the pads. Plug in connector, if needed. Make sure no one is touching the person. Push the "Analyze" button if necessary. If a shock is advised, push the "Shock" button. Resume compressions and follow AED prompts.

    4. Follow Up

    When emergency medical personnel arrive, they will take over and may do CPR

    or take the person to the hospital, if needed.