First Aid/Obstructed Airway

From Wikibooks, open books for an open world
Jump to navigation Jump to search
 First Aid100% developed 

Introduction100% developedIssues in Providing Care100% developedPrimary Assessment & Basic Life Support100% developedSecondary Assessment100% developedCirculatory Emergencies100% developed

Respiratory Emergencies100% developedSoft Tissue Injuries75% developedBone & Joint Injuries100% developedEnvironmental Illness & Injury100% developed

Medical Conditions & Poisoning75% developedAdvanced Topics75% developedAppendices75% developedMeta content75% developed


Conscious Victims[edit | edit source]

A person may be choking if:

  • they are desperately grabbing at their neck
  • they cannot speak or cry out
  • their face turns blue from lack of oxygen

The initial action if you suspect choking is to clearly ask the victim "Are you choking?"

If the victim can reply verbally, you should not undertake any physical contact, but do encourage the victim to cough.

Treatment for adults and children[edit | edit source]

  1. Encourage the victim to cough - some victims are in so much panic they require encouragement to cough.
  2. Deliver up to 5 hard blows with the heel of your hand to the centre of the victims back between the shoulder blades.
  3. If the object has still not been removed, and the victim is still choking, you should perform up to five abdominal thrusts.
    • The rescuer stands behind and to the side of the victim and wraps their arms around the victim's sides, underneath the victim's arms.
    • One hand is made into a fist and placed, thumb side in, flat against the victim's upper abdomen, below the ribs but above the navel.
    • The other hand grabs the fist and directs it in a series of upward thrusts until the object obstructing the airway is expelled.
    • The thrusts should not compress or restrict the ribcage in any way.
    • If you're not able to compress the victim's diaphragm due to their size or pregnancy, then perform the thrusts at the chest.
  4. Continue a cycle of back blows and abdominal thrusts until the blockage is removed, or the victim becomes unconscious (see below for action when unconscious).
Abdominal thrusts are performed only on conscious adult or child victims with a severe airway obstruction

Note that even when performed correctly, abdominal thrusts can injure the person they are performed on, and so should always be used as a last resort after encouragement to cough and back blows. Abdominal thrusts should never be performed on someone who can still cough, breathe, or speak - encourage them to cough instead.

If the victim loses consciousness, call for an ambulance. They fall - you call

Obstructed Airway for Infants[edit | edit source]

For infants, a severe obstruction may be accompanied by a high-pitched, crow-like sound which is not present in adults or children. This is due to the incomplete formation of the infant's airway. Instead of abdominal thrusts, alternate 5 chest thrusts with 5 back blows:

  1. Hold the infant with the head in your hand, and the spine along your forearm and the head below the rest of the body.
  2. Compress the chest 5 times as you would for infant CPR.
  3. Switch the infant to your other forearm, so their chest is now against the arm.
  4. Perform 5 back blows, keeping the infant's head below the rest of the body.
  5. Continue until the obstruction is cleared, or the infant goes unconscious.

Unconscious Victims[edit | edit source]

Send a bystander to activate the Emergency Medical System if possible.

  • Rescuers alone with an adult victim should call an ambulance immediately.
  • Rescuers alone with a child or infant victim should first perform about 2 minutes of CPR and then call an ambulance.

Commence a primary assessment, starting with Airway.

It is highly likely that the patient will not be breathing if they are unconscious as a result of airway obstruction, so you should be prepared to commence CPR if this is the case. You should continue to attempt to put breaths in to the patient, even if they appear to not be reaching the lungs.

 
Respiratory Emergencies
100% developed 

Anaphylactic Shock100% developedAsthma & Hyperventilation100% developedObstructed Airway100% developed