Yup, that was what we were told.
+1, as basic 1st aiders may lack the skills neccessary to call it.
Yup, that was what we were told.
Any links?
+1, as basic 1st aiders may lack the skills neccessary to call it.
Rob James lasted 4 minutes before they could get him back aboard when he fell off a fully crewed yacht entering Exmouth (I think) in the middle of Winter.
edit:- It was off Salcombe.
Reported at the time as 4 minutes … you must be thinking of somebody else.
He was dead by the time they tried to get him aboard which is why they couldn't do it. They found his body a couple of hours later but it was the initial shock that killed him, in 4 minutes or probably less.
A member of the crew of Colt Cars who tried to get him aboard and failed. He reckoned they failed because he was already dead from a heart attack. I was introduced to him with a couple of others one Friday night, after racing, in the Royal Cornwall Yacht Club. Please don't ask me his name, it was 30 odd years ago. If I'd known I was going to wake up an anal keyboard warrior- one of the types who never believe anything without a 'source' - I wouldn't have mentioned that I knew anything about it in the first place.Your source?
Rob James lasted 4 minutes before they could get him back aboard when he fell off a fully crewed yacht entering Exmouth (I think) in the middle of Winter.
edit:- It was off Salcombe.
You need to find an instructor who is more realistic. You keep going as long as you can without putting yourself in harms way.I was taught on first aid courses that you don't decide when enough is enough. You keep going until help arrives or you physically can't do anymore.
I was taught on first aid courses that you don't decide when enough is enough. You keep going until help arrives or you physically can't do anymore.
You need to find an instructor who is more realistic. You keep going as long as you can without putting yourself in harms way.
Try it one day it is bloody knackering and that is with the biggest adrenalin rush you have ever had.
...Indeed. It's surprising just how much oomph you have to put into poor Resusci Annie - whose face, remarkably on topic, is based on the death mask of a young woman pulled, drowned, from the Seine.
Sorry, I should have explained I spent five years in a Mountain Rescue Team. Performing CPR and mouth to mouth with chunks of ice or rock whizzing past is a very real risk.[/I], the other says "as long as you can". Not putting yourself in harm's way is a side issue
Sorry, I should have explained I spent five years in a Mountain Rescue Team. Performing CPR and mouth to mouth with chunks of ice or rock whizzing past is a very real risk.
My last first aid qualification was taught by a Para battlefield paramedic. Perhaps the best practical first aid course I have ever done! Since then I've totally changed my first aid kit, gone onto field dressings.
The last two requalification have said go until you are exhausted, about 10 mins. We are working in a totally different environment and the local ambulance is not going to pull up beside the boat in under 11 mins (there might be a huge clue there about the time somebody is expected to do CPR).