Roll the patient far enough to allow fluids to flow out of the mouth. Remove any material still in the mouth with your gloved finger ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation
Viral HIV/AIDs Herpes HVP (Genital warts) (no cure)
Parasitical crabs and scabies (curable)
Birth control condom female condom sponge diaphragm norplant suppository pill and depot.
11 (No Transcript) 12 Drugs and alcohol
Drugs
Stupid waste of money
Broke
Trouble with law
Kids are neglected
No job/ sleep
No sports
Cant concentrate
confused
13 More drugs and alcohol
More drugs
Affect on brain long term
Addictive
Mo motivation
14 More drugs and alcohol
Alcohol
Drunks all over
Kids not going to school
FAS
Violence
More deaths
Accidents
Families fall a part
Lose jobs
15 More drugs and alcohol
More Alcohol
9. Lose friends
Go broke
Loss of tradition
Bums
Lose homes
Lose kids
Kids start drinking
Sold at stores
16 More drugs and alcohol
drugs can kill you
you can die young
drugs can cause memory lost
all drugs are cigs weed cocaine mushrooms joints and heroine.
17 Fetal Alcohol Syndrome
By Amos olanna
18 Signs and symptoms of Fetal alcohol syndrome
Low birth weight
Small head circumference
Failure to thrive
Developmental delay
Organ dysfunction
19 More signs and symptoms of FAS
Facial abnormalitiesincluding smaller eye openings flattened cheekbones and indistinct philtrum (an underdeveloped groove between the nose and the upper lip)
Epilepsy
Poor coordination/fine motor skills
20 More signs and symptoms of FAS
Poor socialization skills such as difficulty and maintaining friendships and relating to groups
Lack of imagination or curiosity
Learning difficulties including poor memory inability to understand concepts such as time and money poor language comprehension poor problem-solving skills
21 More signs and symptoms of FAS
11. Behavioral problems including hyperactivity inability to concentrate social withdrawal stubbornness impulsiveness and anxiety.
If you need to provide rescue ventilations use a ventilation shield or ventilation mask to eliminate direct mouth-to-mouth contact with the patient.
Dispose of used barriers properly to help prevent exposure to potentially infectious material.
25 Assessing for respond
Introduce yourself
Introduce yourself and inform the patient that you are a trained first aid provider
2. Tap and shout
If she does not respond to your voice tap her shoulder and shout Are you okay
26 More assessing for responding
3. More tap and shouting
Unresponsiveness may be sign of a serious life-threatening condition and requires immediate activation of Emergency Medical Services (EMS)
27 Mechanism for spinal injury
1. Get into a comfortable position and use both hands to hold the head in the position you found it.
2. Movement of a suspected spinal injury should only occur in order to establish an open air passage to the lungs or to protect a patient who is in serious danger from his surroundings.
28 Air way- head tilt chin lift
Place your hands on the patients forehead.
Place the fingertips of your other hand under the bony part of the chin
29 More Airway- head-tilt chin-lift
3. Apply firm backward pressure on the patients forehead while lifting her upward. This should tilt her head back and move her jaw forward.
30 More airway- head-tilt chin-lift
Avoid pressing too deeply into the soft tissue of the patients chin with your fingers.
Leave the mouth slightly open.
31 More airway--head-tiltchin-lift
Once an open airway is establish you must continually maintain it.
Use your hand on the patients forehead to maintain head-tilt.
Lift the bony part of her chin with your fingers.
32 Clearing the airway--logroll
Removing solid material
Remove any visible solid material with your gloved finger.
2. Avoid pushing material further down into the airway.
33 More clearing the airway
Removing fluid material--logroll
Quickly prepare patient
3. Act fast. Do not delay
Grasp the arm on the opposite side of the patient near the elbow and pull it in to brace the patients side.
34 More clearing the airway--log roll
Removing fluid material --log roll
5.place you free hand underneath patients head and neck.
Roll the patient
Roll the patients in one piece like a log lifting the head to keep it in line with the rest of the body.
Move the head and shoulders and torso together without twisting
35 More clearing the airway--log roll
Roll the patient far enough to allow fluids to flow out of the mouth.
Remove any material still in the mouth with your gloved finger
36 Protecting the airway-- recovering position
Prepare the patient
3.patients arm nearest you straight out above her head.
4. Bring her far leg upright so her foot is flat on ground next to her knee.
5. Take her far arm and bring it across her chest placing her hand on shoulder nearest you
37 More protecting the airway-- recovery position
Roll the patient
6. Grasping far hip and shoulder roll patient in one piece keeping head shoulders and torso from twisting.
7. The patients knee and elbow will make contact with the ground stabilizing the body and allowing you to provide other care.
38 More protecting the airway-- recovery position
Monitor the patient
Roll patient forward enough to ensure n open airway.
Make sure there is no pressure on her chest that might restrict breathing.
The recovery position will allow fluids the drain from the airway.
It will also help prevent the tongue from blocking the airway.
39 Breathing-- rescue ventilations using a mask
Place mask
Inspect the mask to make sure the one-way valve is in place.
Place mask flat on the patients face laying the top of the mask over the bridge of the patients nose.
40 More breathing-- Rescue ventilations using a mask
Establish an airway
Place palm of your hand on patients forehead and use your thumb and forefinger to control top of the mask.
Use thumb of hand lifting patients chin to control bottom of mask.
use head-tilt chin-lift and bring patients face up into mask to create an airtight seal and establish airway.
41 More breathing-- Rescue ventilations using a mask
Ventilate
Take a normal breath and blow through the valve opening to deliver ventilation.
Breath should be 1 second in length and have sufficient volume to create a visible rise of the patients chest.
42 More breathing-- rescue ventilations using a mask
Allow for Exhalation
Remove our mouth and let the patient completely exhale.
Take a fresh breath for the next ventilation
43 Breathing-- rescue ventilations using a shield
Place shield
1. Place the ventilation port of he shield in the patients mouth.
44 More breathing-- Rescue ventilations using a shield
Establish an Airway
Use head-tilt chin-lift to establish an open airway
Seal patients nose by pinching the nostrils closed.
45 More breathing-- Rescue ventilations using a shield
Ventilate
Take a normal breath. Press your mouth on shield over patients mouth to create an airtight seal.
Blow through the port to deliver ventilation.
Breath should be 1 second in length and have sufficient volume to create a visible rise of the patients chest.
46 More breathing-- Rescue ventilation using a shield
Allow for Exhalation
Remove your mouth and let patient completely exhale.
Take a fresh breath for next ventilation.
The same technique can be used to provide mouth to mouth ventilation if you elect to not use a barrier to ventilate.
47 Circulation-- chest compressions
Hand positioning
Position patient on her back on a flat firm surface. Kneel next to chest.
Place heel of your hand on the center of her breastbone between nipples.
Place your other hand on top of the first. Interlace fingers to help maintain position.
48 More circulation-- chest compressions
Body positioning
Get as close to patient as possible.
Bring your body up and over so your shoulders are directly above your hands.
Lock your elbows and shoulders.
49 More circulation-- chest compressions
Compressions
Using upper body weight push straight down to a depth of 1 1/2 to 2 inches or about 4 to 5 centimeters.
Relax and allow chest to fully expand to normal position. Move immediately into down stroke of next compression.
Compress at a rate of about 100 times per minute.
About PowerShow.com
PowerShow.com is a leading presentation/slideshow sharing website. Whether your application is business, how-to, education, medicine, school, church, sales, marketing, online training or just for fun, PowerShow.com is a great resource. And, best of all, most of its cool features are free and easy to use.
You can use PowerShow.com to find and download example online PowerPoint ppt presentations on just about any topic you can imagine so you can learn how to improve your own slides and presentations for free. Or use it to find and download high-quality how-to PowerPoint ppt presentations with illustrated or animated slides that will teach you how to do something new, also for free. Or use it to upload your own PowerPoint slides so you can share them with your teachers, class, students, bosses, employees, customers, potential investors or the world. Or use it to create really cool photo slideshows - with 2D and 3D transitions, animation, and your choice of music - that you can share with your Facebook friends or Google+ circles. That's all free as well!
For a small fee you can get the industry's best online privacy or publicly promote your presentations and slide shows with top rankings. But aside from that it's free. We'll even convert your presentations and slide shows into the universal Flash format with all their original multimedia glory, including animation, 2D and 3D transition effects, embedded music or other audio, or even video embedded in slides. All for free. Most of the presentations and slideshows on PowerShow.com are free to view, many are even free to download. (You can choose whether to allow people to download your original PowerPoint presentations and photo slideshows for a fee or free or not at all.) Check out PowerShow.com today - for FREE. There is truly something for everyone!