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Ongoing Training Examples: CPR and First Aid

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Perform First Aid when necessary. Understanding Your Responsibilities in an ... or touch your mouth, nose, or eyes when giving First Aid. Knowledge (cont. ... First Aid (cont. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ongoing Training Examples: CPR and First Aid


1
On-going Training ExamplesCPR and First Aid
  • Presented by Tricia Rogers,
  • Angie Lee, JoAnne
    Thull

2
Objectives for a successful On-Going Training
program
  • Provide a clear definition of the purpose of the
    meeting.
  • Let team members know what is expected of them.
  • Allow interaction and feedback throughout the
    training session.
  • Summarize and debrief at the end of the meeting.

3
Provide a clear definition of the purpose of the
meeting
  • Prior to meeting, make agenda to clearly state
    purpose.

4
Let team members know expectations
  • Make certain that each staff member has the
    information needed to get the job done
    including
  • Accuracy
  • Timeliness
  • Interpretability

5
Allow interaction and feedback throughout
training session
  • During the meeting
  • 1.The leader sets the tone for each and every
    session.
  • 2. Give everyone a chance to contribute

6
Allow interaction cont.
  • 3. Truly listen to participants, treating them
    with dignity and respect.
  • 4. Involve everyone in team problem solving.

7
Summarize and debrief at the end of the meeting
  • Sense of closure
  • Evaluation of the meeting
  • As an instructor
  • As a participant

8
Objectives
  • After completion of this presentation, the
    employee will be able to
  • Understand your responsibilities in an emergency
    situation
  • Be knowledgeable in an emergency situation
  • Perform CPR properly
  • Perform First Aid when necessary

9
Understanding Your Responsibilities in an
Emergency Situation
10
Responsibilities (cont.)
  • Check
  • Call
  • Care

11
Responsibilities (cont.)
  • When to call in an emergency situation
  • If victim is unconscious, call 911 immediately

12
Responsibilities (cont.)
  • When to call in an emergency situation
  • If the victim is conscious and does not want you
    to call for an ambulance, call anyway if the
    victim
  • Becomes unconscious
  • Has trouble breathing
  • Has chest pain or pressure
  • Is bleeding severely
  • Has possible broken bones
  • Has injuries to the head, neck or back
  • Appears to have been poisoned
  • Is vomiting or passing blood
  • Has pressure or pain in the abdomen that is
    persistent

13
Responsibilities (cont.)
  • Before caring for an injured or ill person,
    you must receive victims permission. To receive
    permission, you must explain who you are, how
    much training you have, and how you plan to help.

14
Being knowledgeable in an emergency situation
15
Knowledge (cont.)
  • Before you can give help, you must be able to
    recognize an emergency situation
  • Unusual noises
  • Unusual sights
  • Unusual odors
  • Unusual appearances or behaviors

16
Knowledge (cont.)
  • Once you recognize an emergency has occurred you
    must decide whether to help and how you can best
    help.
  • In order to help, you must act.

17
Knowledge (cont.)
  • After establishing that a victim is unconscious
    you must act by checking to see if the victim
  • Is breathing
  • Has a pulse
  • Is bleeding severely

18
Knowledge (cont.)
  • Ways of Reducing Disease Transmission While
    Providing First Aid

19
Knowledge (cont.)
  • Reducing disease transmission
  • Avoid contact with bodily fluids when possible
  • Place barriers, such as disposable gloves or a
    clean dry cloth, between the victims body fluids
    and yourself.
  • Wash your hands with soap and water immediately
    after giving care.

20
Knowledge (cont.)
  • Reducing disease transmission
  • Wear protective clothing, such as disposable
    gloves, to cover any cuts, scraps, and skin
    conditions you may have.
  • Do not eat, drink, or touch your mouth, nose, or
    eyes when giving First Aid.

21
Knowledge (cont.)
  • Reducing disease transmission
  • Do not touch objects that may be soiled with
    blood.
  • Be prepared by having a First Aid kit handy.

22
Knowledge (cont.)
  • By following these guidelines, your risk of
    receiving or transmitting an infections disease
    will decrease.

23
Performing CPR
24
CPR
  • What does CPR stand for?
  • Cardiopulmonary resuscitation

25
CPR
  • Rescue breathing
  • When a person stops breathing, you have to breath
    for that person.
  • It is a way of breathing air into a person that
    supplies him/her with the oxygen needed to stay
    alive.
  • Given to anyone who is unconscious and not
    breathing, but has a pulse.

26
CPR
  • Rescue breathing cont.
  • If, when you check, the person is not breathing
    and your breaths do not go in
  • Retilt persons head
  • Give breaths again

27
CPR
  • Rescue breathing cont.
  • If air still will not go in, begin abdominal
    thrusts.
  • Place heal of one hand against middle of abdomen,
    just above the navel.
  • Give up to five abdominal thrusts.
  • Lift jaw and tongue and sweep out mouth.
  • Tilt head back with chin and give breaths again.

28
CPR
  • Rescue breathing cont.
  • If breaths still do not go in, continue the
    sequence beginning with retilting the victims
    head.
  • Continue this sequence until the breaths go in or
    the victim starts breathing on their own.

29
CPR
  • Administering CPR
  • If the victim does not have a pulse, begin CPR.
  • Breaths and compressions are different for
    adults, children, and infants.

30
CPR
  • Administering CPR to and adult
  • Call 911 immediately or designate a specific
    person to make the call.
  • Find hand position on breast bone.
  • Position shoulders over hands and compress chest
    15 times.
  • Give 2 slow breaths.

31
CPR
  • Administering CPR to an adult
  • Give 2 slow breaths.
  • Do 3 more sets of 15 compressions and 2 breaths.
  • Recheck pulse and breathing for about 5 seconds.
  • If there is no pulse, continue sets of 15
    compressions and 2 breaths.

32
CPR
  • Administering CPR to a child
  • Find hand position on about center of the
    breastbone.
  • Position shoulders over hands. Compress chest 5
    times.
  • Give one slow breath.
  • Repeat cycles of 5 compressions and 1 slow breath
    for about 1 minute.

33
CPR
  • Administering CPR to a child cont.
  • Call 911 if you have not already done so.
  • Recheck pulse and breathing for about 5 seconds.
  • If there is still no pulse, continue sets of 5
    compressions and 1 breath. Recheck pulse and
    breathing every few minutes.

34
Performing First Aid
35
First Aid
  • Each year in the United States, thousands of
    people will die, millions will be injured, and
    over 100 billion dollars will be spent, all
    needlessly. The causemany injuries that could
    have been prevented.

36
First Aid (cont.)
  • Injury prevention quiz
  • Do you wear a safety belt when driving or riding
    in a motor vehicle?
  • Do you refrain from operating motor vehicles
    after drinking alcoholic beverages?
  • If you own a gun, do you keep it unloaded and
    locked up in a safe place?
  • Do the stairs where you live have handrails?
  • Do you use a stepladder or a sturdy stool to
    reach high out-of-reach objects?

37
First Aid (cont.)
  • Quiz cont.
  • Do you have adequate lighting in halls and
    stairways?
  • Do you wear a helmet when riding a bike,
    motorcycle, or skateboard?
  • Do you wear a life jacket when participating in
    activities on or near the water?
  • Do you wear safety protection (i.e., goggles and
    hearing protection) and follow equipment safety
    recommendations when operating power tools?

38
First Aid (cont.)
  • Types of wounds
  • Bruise
  • Scrape
  • Cut
  • Avulsion
  • Puncture

39
First Aid (cont.)
  • Control Bleeding
  • Cover wound with dressing and press firmly
    against the wound with hand.
  • Elevate arm above the level of the heart.
  • Cover dressings with roller bandage.
  • If bleeding doesnt stop
  • Apply additional bandages.
  • Squeeze artery against bone.

40
First Aid (cont.)
  • Burns
  • Superficial burn (1st degree)
  • Partial-thickness burn (2nd degree)
  • Full-thickness burn (3rd degree)

41
First Aid (cont.)
  • Care for burns
  • Stop the burning.
  • Cool the burn.
  • Cover the burn.

42
First Aid (cont.)
  • Four basic types of injuries to muscles, bones,
    and joints
  • Fractures
  • Dislocations
  • Strains
  • Sprains

43
First Aid (cont.)
  • If you suspect a serious bone, muscle, or joint
    injury, you must keep the injured part from
    moving.
  • Splinting immobilizes an injured muscle, bone,
    or joint.

44
First Aid (cont.)
  • Types of splints
  • Anatomic Splint
  • Soft Splint
  • Sling
  • Rigid Splint

45
First Aid (cont.)
  • Signs of Sudden Illness
  • Feeling light-headed, dizzy, confused, or weak
  • Changes in skin color,sweating
  • Nausea or vomiting
  • Diarrhea
  • Changes in consciousness
  • Seizure
  • Paralysis or inability to move
  • Slurred speech
  • Difficulty seeing or breathing
  • Severe headache

46
First Aid (cont.)
  • Care for Sudden Illness
  • Dont second guess call EMS
  • Help the victim rest comfortably.
  • Keep the victim from getting chilled or
    overheated.
  • Reassure the victim.
  • Do not give anything to eat or drink unless the
    victim is fully conscious.

47
First Aid (cont.)
If the victim
48
First Aid (cont.)
  • Four ways a person can be poisoned
  • Swallowing the poison
  • Inhaling the poison
  • Absorbing it through the skin
  • Injection

49
First Aid (cont.)
  • Signs of poisoning
  • Nausea
  • Vomiting
  • Diarrhea
  • Chest of abdominal pain
  • Breathing difficulty
  • Sweating
  • Changes in consciousness or seizures

50
First Aid (cont.)
  • Actions to take for those poisoned include
  • Check the scene to make sure its safe and to
    gather clues
  • Remove the victim from the source of the poison
  • Check the victims level of consciousness,
    breathing and pulse
  • Care for any life-threatening conditions
  • If victim is conscious, ask questions
  • Call poison control center

51
The End
52
Reference List
  • American Red Cross, (1993). Community First Aid
    and Safety. Boston StayWell
  • Tenny, C.M. (1988). Blue Cross and Blue Shield
    First Aid Facts.
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