Saturday, June 10, 2017

Homeschool Health Class: CPR & First Aid information

Cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) is a lifesaving technique useful in many emergencies, including heart attack or near drowning, in which someone's breathing or heartbeat has stopped. 
For an infant, shout and gently tap the child on the shoulder. If there is no response and not breathing or not breathing normally, position the infant on his or her back and begin CPR. Give 30 gentle chest compressions at the rate of 100-120/minute. Use two or three fingers in the center of the chest just below the nipples.


CPR information



Choking occurs when an object or food becomes lodged in the throat or windpipe, blocking airflow. If airflow is blocked, choking can be a medical emergency and needs urgent attention.
The main symptom is an inability to breathe or talk. There may be accompanying coughing. In severe cases, the skin may turn blue.
The object may be dislodged from someone else by alternating between five back blows between the shoulder blades and five abdominal thrusts (the Heimlich maneuver).
To perform abdominal thrusts (Heimlich maneuver) on yourself: First, if you're alone and choking, call 911 or your local emergency number immediately. Then, althoughyou'll be unable to effectively deliver back blows to yourself, you can still perform abdominal thrusts to dislodge the item.

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Choking information
Woman administering the Heimlich maneuver to a man who is choking.





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Related image
Alcohol Poisoning






You never know when first aid skills will come in handy. This news story got me thinking that I want my kids to be helpers and not helpless in emergency situations. 

No phones, water or first aid available after 2015 ADFA bus crash

Tom McIlroy



Australian Defence Force Academy recruits injured in a bus crash near Goulburn were travelling without adequate first aid supplies, water or satellite phones at the time of the November 2015 accident, with a passing property owner the only person able to raise the alarm.


The bus was carrying 57 passengers.
Three passengers from the bus were airlifted to hospital. Photo: Goulburn Post
Three passengers from the bus were airlifted to hospital.
Three passengers from the bus were airlifted to hospital. Photo: Goulburn Post



A review of the crash and emergency response by the Defence Department shows the three people seriously injured were initially treated with optional first aid kits carried by some of the cadets and passersby, while no water or passenger manifest was on-board the four bus convoy.

The scathing report, released under freedom of information rules, shows the only shade available to the injured passengers in the immediate aftermath came from uninjured cadets holding up ground sheets to block the sun in 24 degree conditions.

The bus crashed about 9.55am on November 21, 2015, while carrying 57 passengers on Sandy Point Road, Windellama, about 50km south-east of Goulburn.


Three passengers were seriously injured, later airlifted to Canberra and Sydney. A further nine passengers were taken by road to Goulburn.

The cadets and midshipmen were returning from a training exercise at HMAS Creswell at Jervis Bay, passengers in the lead bus in a four vehicle convoy.


The nearby property owner, an Air Force warrant officer who had just arrived home, called 000 about four minutes after the crash.

Emergency services arrived on site about 50 minutes later, with police, fire and ambulance crews working to free a trapped recruit after an hour and 20 minutes.

The report notes satellite phones used during the training exercise were not on-board the buses and the only mobile phone coverage in the area was from on top of a hill about 650 metres away.

Further analysis by Defence found mobile phone signal was not available for more than 20 kilometres in either direction from the accident site.

Had the local resident not been passing by the crash site, "one of the remaining buses would have been required to search for a location where a mobile phone signal was available".

A registered nurse and a State Emergency Service volunteer who both passed by the accident site within half an hour of the crash provided additional first aid.

"Had the property owner... not arrived at his property immediately prior to the accident and immediately contacted the emergency services, there would have been a significant delay to the arrival of these services," the report says.

"The property owner had food, ice and water with him for the weekend at the property and made these available to the ADFA staff and uninjured cadets; no other supplies were available."

In April 2016 the driver of the bus was charged with three counts of dangerous driving occasioning grievous bodily harm and negligent driving occasioning grievous bodily harm. He has pleaded not guilty and will face court in Sydney in October.

The report found effective planning for the exercise but significant shortfalls in the transport phase. A number of risk management strategies had not been implemented.

Academy staff members who attended the most seriously injured passengers had all previously received battlefield first aid training, which the report says was of "enormous benefit at the accident site."

"The early call made to the emergency services, by the property, coupled with the immediate reaction and response by all the ADFA cadets and staff involved in this incident, limited the severity and consequences to those members that suffered injuries," the report says.

"Their actions brought credit to ADFA and the Defence Force."

The report's seven recommendations include calls for first aid kits, water, adequate shade provisions and passenger manifests to be carried on future exercises, as well as for more effective command and control measures to be in place.

Defence has been contacted for further comment.

http://www.canberratimes.com.au/national/public-service/no-phones-water-or-first-aid-available-after-2015-adfa-bus-crash-20170503-gvxvbx.html


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