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Key Principles of Basic Life Support for Adults

Key Principles of Basic Life Support for Adults. Simple First Aid and CPR. For all Emergencies. Call 9-1-1 for any unresponsive victim. 9-1-1. Check for Breathing. Open the airway with the head tilt-chin lift method to check for breathing. Check for Breathing.

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Key Principles of Basic Life Support for Adults

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  1. Key Principles of Basic Life Support for Adults Simple First Aid and CPR

  2. For all Emergencies Call 9-1-1 for any unresponsive victim. 9-1-1

  3. Check for Breathing Open the airway with the head tilt-chin lift method to check for breathing.

  4. Check for Breathing Look, listen and feel for breathing for not over 10 seconds.

  5. Giving Breaths Use a barrier device of some type while giving breaths.

  6. Giving Breaths Give 2 breaths, each for about 1 second, watching the chest rise and fall.

  7. Giving Chest Compressions Give 30 chest compressions, hard and fast, positioning hand midway between breasts.

  8. Cycles of Breaths/Compressions Use cycles of 2 breaths and 30 compressions. 2 breaths + 30 compressions

  9. Use of an AED Use the AED as soon as it is available and ready to use. Automated External Defibrillator

  10. Using AED and CPR Follow the AED prompts to give a shock, then give CPR again while the AED is analyzing the victim’s rhythm.

  11. The Recovery Position If the victim responds, position him in the recovery position and monitor breathing until help arrives. Infant Recovery Position

  12. Using an AED First turn it on. Then simply follow instructions.

  13. Using and EpiPen Make sure it belongs to the patient, remove cap, insert, wait 10 seconds, remove, rub the spot.

  14. Choking Victim Use of the abdominal thrust method.

  15. First Aid for Heart Attack • Call 9-1-1. • Make victim comfortable and loosen clothing. • Check if victim is on heart medication. • Give victim aspirin if they are not allergic. • Reassure and calm victim. • Give basic life support if needed. • Do not let victim eat or drink anything, except medication or aspirin.

  16. Bleeding and Wound Care • Put on gloves or wash hands often. • Place a sterile dressing on the wound. • Apply direct pressure with your hand. • If bleeding badly, put another dressing on top of the first. • Apply pressure bandage to keep pressure on the wound. • Call 9-1-1.

  17. First Aid for Shock • Symptoms: Anxiety, confusion, agitation, restlessness, dizziness, cool, clammy, sweating, pale, rapid and shallow breathing, thirst, nausea, vomiting, not responsive. • Check for normal breathing and severe bleeding, treat for these. • Call 9-1-1. • Put victim on back, raise legs 8-12”. • Loosen tight clothing. • Turn victim’s head if vomiting occurs. • Keep victim warm with coat or blanket. • Give no food or drink, alcohol or tobacco. • Offer reassurance and comfort and be calming. • If unresponsive, put in recovery position.

  18. First Aid for Burns • Stop the burning. • Cool the area with water, but not over 20% of the body. • Remove clothing and jewelry in burn area. • Call 9-1-1. • Treat for shock. • Carefully cover the burn with a nonstick dressing.

  19. First Aid for Bone, Joint, Muscle Injuries Use R.I.C.E.: • Rest • Ice • Compression • Elevation

  20. First Aid for: • Stroke (first 2 hours are critical) • Asthma (check for inhalers) • Fainting (look for injuries from fall) • Seizures (check for medication) • Diabetic emergencies • Problems in pregnancy • Poisoning (call poison hotline)

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