Biology, asked by mithileshpandey9428, 1 year ago

How to rescue a person from choking

Answers

Answered by sazzzrrrrtt
0

Mild choking: encourage them to cough

If the airway is only partly blocked, the person will usually be able to speak, cry, cough or breathe.

They'll usually be able to clear the blockage themselves.

To help with mild choking in an adult or child over 1 year old:

encourage them to keep coughing to try to clear the blockage

ask them to try to spit out the object if it's in their mouth

don't put your fingers in their mouth to help them as they may bite you accidentally

If coughing doesn't work, start back blows.

Severe choking: back blows and abdominal thrusts

Where choking is severe, the person won't be able to speak, cry, cough or breathe. Without help, they'll eventually become unconscious.

To carry out a back blow on an adult or child over 1 year old:

Stand behind them and slightly to one side. Support their chest with 1 hand. Lean them forward so the object blocking their airway will come out of their mouth, rather than moving further down.

Give up to 5 sharp blows between their shoulder blades with the heel of your hand. The heel is between the palm of your hand and your wrist.

Check if the blockage has cleared.

If not, give up to 5 abdominal thrusts.

Abdominal thrusts

Don't give abdominal thrusts to babies under 1 year old or pregnant women.

To carry out an abdominal thrust:

Stand behind the person who's choking.

Place your arms around their waist and bend them forward.

Clench 1 fist and place it right above their belly button.

Put the other hand on top of your fist and pull sharply inwards and upwards.

Repeat this movement up to 5 times.

If the person's airway is still blocked after trying back blows and abdominal thrusts, get help immediately:

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