tudorsailor
Well-Known Member
Good story. Who did the mouth to mouth on an elderly lady who had just vomited then? I keep a one way pocket face mask in the glove box for just this reason.
TudorSailor
TudorSailor
Good story. Who did the mouth to mouth on an elderly lady who had just vomited then? I keep a one way pocket face mask in the glove box for just this reason.
TudorSailor
I'm not sure that it would be much use. I may well be wrong, but my understanding is that a defib will simply get the ticker working again. If the underlying cause of it stopping/going into fibrillation is still there then it will be a short lived (literally) success. Without the approriate intervention then the difib will only buy you a very short time.
By coincidence, we have a community presentation this evening on a proposal to buy a defibrillator for the village. I'll see if I can find out.
I'm not sure that it would be much use. I may well be wrong, but my understanding is that a defib will simply get the ticker working again. If the underlying cause of it stopping/going into fibrillation is still there then it will be a short lived (literally) success. Without the approriate intervention then the difib will only buy you a very short time.
By coincidence, we have a community presentation this evening on a proposal to buy a defibrillator for the village. I'll see if I can find out.
I was recently in a head-on collision, where the driver of the other car died. My own car was on the back of a recovery vehicle which had already stopped in a narrow village street as the old woman driving a small hatchback crashed into us at about 30mph. Both of us in the front of the cab knew she had suffered some kind of medical event before the impact, as we could see she had no awareness whatsover of our presence or took any kind of braking or evasive action, but just carried on at the same speed into our front.
If there's an underlying reason why the heart is stopped, CPR won't get it going again, either. Basically, a defibrillator is the first-aid of choice if the heart is stopped; if that won't get things running again, then probably nothing will. Defibrillators are available in many public places, such as stations and so on; they are steadily increasing in availability.
I once went to a "gentleman of the road" (dosser) who had collapsed and fallen off a bench outside a Spar supermarket on a council estate.
I didn't really have much option but to perform CPR, including mouth to mouth on his filthy, smelly and bewiskered, face.
This was before the invention of face masks or saliva dams. All we had was a small rubber airway.
He was dead as a do-do, but for the benefit of the watching throng we needed to go through all the procedures. Luckily a GP arived from a nearby medical centre and pronounced him dead.
If anybody is unsure wether to give me to mouth or not due to blood, trauma to the mouth/nose area or due to casualty vomit, do not worry.
Start chest compressions, place palm of your hand two fingers above the centre of the casualtys chest, (sternum), and press down if possible 100 times a minute, 1/3 the depth of the casualties chest.
Do this until,1/ another helper arrives to assist then swap over.
2/ you cannot physically carry on, due to exhaustion
3/ arrival of the emergency services.
If you can do this, you will do no worse to what is already a bad situation!!!!
Nope. It used to be two finger widths above the bottom of the sternum, but that advice has now been revised to placing hands in the centre of the chest (approximately nipple line) If you reread your advice, you will see that this would have the rescuers hands too high on the chest and therefore ineffective, as well as more likely to break ribs. Contrary to some opinions, breaking ribs during CPR is not inevitable and is most commonly caused by poor hand positioning (although occasionally the patient has brittle bones which doesn't help)
You are absolutly correct, the two fingers advice was for the purpose of giving general guidance for all ages and sexes not being overly pedantic, without getting to bogged down without looking for nipples etc, the point about it being ineffective is also true, as is all CPR, perfect CPR if done 100% correctly is only 30% efficient, the bit about breaking bones is wholly inaccurate.
Only about 15 per cent of patients requiring CPR in a hospital and approximately 1 per cent of patients who have arrested in the community and had CPR survive to leave hospital. And this dismal figure hasn’t changed since CPR was first introduced in about 1960. Moreover, these figures do not give any indication of what state the survivors are in. Many are in a coma or have severe brain damage.
Lakesailor - that's interesting reading. Basically your chances of survival if your heart has stopped increase by only a very, very small amount if someone gives you CPR.
Now, suppose you were in a situation when someone close to you collapsed clutching his/her heart. Obviously, you send out a Mayday, phone 999, or whatever, but you know they have little chance of making it (if their heart has stopped). You have to do something though, so you do whatever you dimly remember from your First Aid course N years ago, and then when the helicopter/lifeboat/ambulance arrives, you at least feel that you've done your best.
I wonder who has actually been in that situation, and did doing something (or being unable to) affect them afterwards - regardless of the effect on the patient!
It is a valid point.
However it doesn't address the proposition that 1st Aiding seems to be centred on CPR.
I haven't done any training for ages. Maybe someone can tell me that I have the wrong impression.