Title: American Red Cross First Aid/CPR/AED For Schools
1American Red CrossFirst Aid/CPR/AEDFor Schools
the Community
- Lay Responder
- (non-professional)
2Deciding to Act
- Consent to give first aid
- Actual consent-
- Implied consent-
3Good Samaritan Law Article
- How many states have enacted this law?
- Why was it DEVELOPED?
- What does the law protect you from?
- What doesnt the law protect you from?
- List the 5 things you must do so the law will
protect you?
4Do No Further Harm Article
- List the 3 reasons you would have to move an
injured victim? - What should you AVOID when you are moving an
injured victim? - What is the proper technique called to move an
unconscious or severely injured victim.
5Universal Precautions p. 711
- Universal Precautions-
- 1.
- 2.
- 3.
- Follow any situation with possible contact with
blood and other bodily fluids.
6Emergency Action Principles
- Check
- Scene
- Safe?
- Clues
- of victims
- Bystanders to help
- Victim
- Injuries
- Life threatening conditions
- Unconscious
- Trouble breathing
- Chest pain or pressure
- No pulse
- Bleeding severely
7- Call
- 911 or local emergency for ambulance get an
AED if available - Give
- Exact location
- Telephone
- What happened
- and condition of victims
- What help is being given
- DONT HANG UP TILL DISPATCHER DOES!
8- Care for victim
- Life threatening injuries 1st
- Less severe
- Help victim stay calm, relaxed
9Checking Conscious Adult
- State your name, certifications,obtain consent
and ask what happened. - Check for life threatening injuries, from head to
toe. (A,B,C,S) - Do not ask the victim to move and do not move the
victim. - Look for a medical alert tag and ask questions.
- Call 911 or have someone call if serious.
10Position Terms
- Supine - On their back
- Prone- Face down
- Recovery- On the side( roll as one unit, no
twisting.
11Checking Unconscious Adult See text pg 723
- 1. Check the scene
- 2. Tap ShoutAre you alright?
- 3. Go call 911. get AED
- 4. Check for Signs of Life (A, B, C S)
- Open airway Head Tilt Chin Lift (tilt head back,
lift chin) listen for breathing no more than
10sec. - If suspect back, neck or head injury Do not Tilt
Neck - Breathing recovery position
12Choking Terms P.725
- Partial Airway Obstruction- when a victim can
partially move air to and from the lungs, cough,
speak. - Complete Airway Obstruction- When a victim can no
longer speak, cough, breath. - Universal distress Signal-
13Conscious Choking Adult ( Breathing Emergencies)
- 1. GET CONSENT
- 2. Give 5 Back Blows
- 3. Give 5 Abdominal thrusts
- 4. Alternate until choking stops or they become
unconscious. - Stand behind victim
- Find belly button
- Make fist with other hand
- Place thumb side of fist against middle of
victims abdomen (just above belly button) - Grab fist with other hand
- Quick upward thrusts
- CONTINUE UNTIL- object is up, victim can breath,
coughs on own, or victim becomes unconscious - Chest Thrusts- obese, pregnant females
14If you are alone Choking
- Give yourself abdominal Thrusts
- Use the back of a tall chair to perform the
thrusts for you. - Call 911 from a land line phone( they will trace
call)
15Unconscious Choking Adult
- -Find hand position
- 5. 30 chest compressions ( at least 2in. Deep))
- 6. 2 rescue breaths
- 7. If dont go in continue RE-TILT TRY AGAIN
- 8. Continue with 30 compressions
- 9. Look for object
- - if you see one remove it
- 10. 2 more breaths
- 11. Continue with cycles
16How to Give A Rescue Breath
- 1. Head Tilt Chin Lift (open airway) and pinch
nose. - 2. Give a slow breath with a complete seal (each
breath should last 1 sec.) - 3. Watch the chest rise
- Gastric Distention- when you ventilate( breath)
too hard and the air skips the lungs and goes
into the stomach.
17Unconscious Choking Adult
- Stop cycles if
- Object removed
- Chest rises with rescue breaths
- Check for signs of circulation
- If none continue with compressions and breaths
- Victim starts breathing on own
- EMS arrives takes over
- Someone else takes over
- If you are too exhausted to continue
- After 5 Cycles Re-check for SIGNS OF LIFE
18If you DO NOT know they are choking
- After the first set of rescue breathes for an
ADULT the breaths DO NOT go in - -YOU REPOSITION TRY THE BREATHS AGAIN!
19Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation (CPR)
- See text pg 734
- No Signs of Life, No AED, Unconscious
- Adult- 12 years or older
- Place yourself midway between the head chest
(kneeling)
20CPR
- 1. Give 30 Chest Compressions
- 1 1/2 -2 inches deep
- Takes about 18 sec (rate of approx 100 per min)
- 2. Give 2 rescue breaths
- Lasts about 1 sec each
- Continue sets of 30 compressions 2 breaths for
2mins or 5 cycles then re-check for signs of
life. - Once CPR is started continue until
- See signs of life
- Scene is unsafe
- AED available
- Too exhausted
- Someone takes over
21Cardiac Chain of Survival
- 4 links
- 1. Early recognition and access to emergency
system - call 911
- 2. Early CPR
- - keeps blood and oxygen flow to organs,
prevents brain damage and death - 3. Early Defibrillation
- - Automated External Defibrillator (AED)
- - Electronic shock to heart
- 4. Early Advanced Life support
- - Paramedics
22Automated External Defibrillator (AED)
- Child (1-8 or less than 55lbs) pediatric pads
- Do not use on metal, water
- Cell phone at least 6ft. away
- Can use with a pace maker
- Remove clothing on chest wipe chest
- Remove nitroglycerin pads
- AED will talk you through procedures
- FOR EVRY MINUTE THE AED IS NOT IN USE IT
DECREASES THE CHANCE OF SURVIVAL BY 10
23Recognizing a heart attack p.739
- Heart Attack- death of cardiac muscle to the
heart due to a blockage - Signs ( most people ignore or deny)
- Chest discomfort or pain (may spread to other
body areas) - Sweating
- Nausea
- Shortness of breath
- General ill feeling
- Deaths are reduced by recognizing early symptoms
of heart attack
24Cardiac Arrest
- Cardiac Arrest- when the heart stops following a
heart attack/blockage - Sudden Cardiac Arrest- is when the heart stops
beating suddenly unexpectedly, when this
happens bloods stop flowing to all vital organs - Respiratory Arrest- when breathing stops
- Each year there are approx. 300,000 cardiac
arrests outside of the hospital. 2000 of those
occur under the age of 25 lead to premature
death.
25Clinical Biological Death
- The best chance of survival is within the first 4
mins. - Clinical Death- after breathing circulation
have stopped you have 4-6 minutes of stored
oxygen before your cells begin to die. - Biological Death- after 10 minutes, brain
activity stops.
26Injuries
- Check
- Scene
- Victim
- Life threatening
- Head to toe
- Call 911
- Care
- Give care until help arrives
27Injuries
- Types
- Wounds/ Burns (Soft Tissue)
- Muscle, Bone, Joint
28Muscles, Bones, Joints pg. 716
- Muscles
- Strain tearing or stretching of muscles or
tendons - Tendons- strong fibers that attach muscle to bone
- Bones
- Fracture a break, chip, or crack in a bone
- Types
- Open (compound)
- Closed (simple)
- Deformity, snap, and pain may be present
29Muscles, Bones, Joints
- Joints
- Sprain tearing of ligaments at a joint
- Wrist, knee, ankle, finger
- Ligaments- strong, tough, soft tissue bands that
attach bone to bone - Dislocation the movement of a bone out of its
position in the joint. Usually caused by a
violent force tearing the ligaments that hold the
bone in place. - Finger
- Apply ice, immobilize and go to doctor
- Do not try to pull it out
-
30Muscles, Bones, Joints
- Signs of severe injury
- Can not move or use body part
- A snap or a pop is heard
- Bone is visible
- Significant bruising, swelling, or deformity
31Care for Muscle, Bone Joint Injuries
- R- Rest
- I- Immobilization
- C- Cold
- Apply ice for up to 72 hours
- 20 min on 20 min off
- E- Elevate
- Keep part immobile, if have to move victim,
1st splint injury. Do not elevate a severe injury
unless it has been splinted
32Immobilizing Muscle, Bone Joint Injuries
- Splint
- Types
- Anatomical- Splinting an uninjured body part to
an injured body part. - Exs-
- Soft-
- Exs-
- Rigid-
- Exs-
33Guidelines to Splinting
- Only if victim must be moved
- Only if you can do without causing more pain
- Splint in position you found it
- Splint above and below site of injury
- Check for proper circulation before and after
splinting (feeling, warmth, color)
34Steps to Splinting
- 1.Support injured area
- 2.Check circulation
- 3.Place splint
- 4.Tie splint in place
- 5.Recheck circulation
35Care for Wounds (External Bleeding) Pg. 740
- Minor Wounds
- Cleaned covered
- Open Wounds
- Control bleeding
- Prevent infection
- Clean cover
- Closed Wounds
- Apply cold
- Major Wounds
- Call 911 and control bleeding
36Wounds 740
- Bruise
- Incision
- Laceration
- Abrasion
- Avulsion
- Puncture
- Infection-
37Bleeding
- Use Latex Gloves
- Arterial- bright red (oxygenated)
- Venous- darker blood
- Approximately 2 pint per 25 pounds
38Clues to Internal Bleeding
- Tender, swollen, bruised or hard areas of the
body - Cool, moist, pale or bluish skin
- Vomiting or coughing up blood
- Excessive thirst
- Confused, faint, drowsy, or unconscious
- Serious Internal Bleeding- Call 911
immediately
39Control Bleeding Pg. 742
- Cover with a dressing and press firmly using
Direct Pressure - Elevate Injury
- 3. If bleeding doesnt stop
- Add additional dressings over top
40Shock (see text pg 733)
- Circulatory system fails to deliver blood to all
parts of the body - Life threatening condition
- Types
- Insulin
- Traumatic (sudden injury)
- Anaphylactic (sting, medication, seafood etc.)
41Shock
- Signals of Traumatic Shock
- Restlessness or irritability
- Altered consciousness
- Pale, cool, moist skin
- Looks disoriented
- Rapid breathing
- Rapid pulse
- Dilated pupils
42Caring for Shock
- Lie down and rest
- Control external bleeding
- Maintain normal body temp
- Elevate legs if injuries allow
- Only water at room temperature
- Make sure advanced help is on the way
43Seizure P. 712
- Seizure
- Do not hold or restrain victim
- Do not place anything in their mouth
- ( unless trained)
- Remove objects that may cause injury
- Cushion head/place something under head
44Sudden Illness Pg. 712
- Stroke
- Diabetic Emergency
- Help victim remain calm get medication
- Poisoning/ Allergic Reactions
- Call 911 Poison Control
45Caring for Sudden Illnesses
- Care for life threatening conditions
- Have victim rest in comfortable position
- Keep from getting chilled or over heated
- No food or water
- Reassure victim
- Send someone to meet EMS
- Ask about medical conditions medications
- Monitor, try to minimize risk of shock
- Watch for changes in consciousness or breathing