CPR
and Choking Emergencies
Carsedra
Glass
EDUC
1005: Child Health, Safety, and Nutrition
Professor
Eissler
09/17/17
While eating lunch and joking with
a friend in the lunchroom 8-year-old Timmy begins to choke on a grape, seeing this his friend Eric runs to get
Principal Morris standing near-by. Acting immediately, he accesses the
situation and sees that Timmy cannot
cough, so Principal Morris has one teacher call 911 and his parents, while
others calm the kids, he then starts to perform the following first aid steps
for choking:
1.
Kneeling slightly behind him and providing the support he places one arm diagonally across his
chest and leans him forward.
2.
He firmly strikes Timmy between the shoulder
blades with the heel of your other hand.
3.
After giving at least five back blows and the
food not dislodging he starts abdominal thrust.
4.
Still kneeling behind the child, wraps his arms
around his waist, locates his belly button with one or two fingers, makes a
fist with the other hand and places his thumb side against the middle of Timmy’s abdomen, just above the navel and well
below the lower tip of his breastbone.
5.
He gives several quick, upward thrusts into the
abdomen and the grape comes flying out.
Timmy is ok and able to breathe
again, the Principal stays with him until paramedics arrive and his grandmother
picks him up.
As the class comes in from playing
on the playground, 6-year-old Molly who is last in line starts having an Asthma
attack. Ms. Williams her teach is in the front instructing students as they
walk in and doesn’t see her. Forgetting her inhaler inside, she finds more and
more difficult to breathe, as a student stops to ask Ms. Williams a question which
stops the line. By this time Molly is
gasping for air and falls to the ground. Ms. William
is looking up sees Molly as she
collapses on the ground. Ms. Williams
rushes the rest of the children inside as she yells for the teacher’s assistant
to call 911 and Molly’s mom. She gets to
Molly and finds her not breathing, right away she starts the following steps to
administer CPR:
1.
Placing Molly on her back on the grass and knows
she needs to open the airway.
2.
With the Molly lying on her back, she tilts her
head back slightly and lifts the chin.
3.
As her head is tilted back and chin lifted, Ms.
Williams pinch Molly’s nose shut, makes a complete seal by placing her mouth
over Molly’s mouth and breathes into her mouth twice, but she is still
unresponsive
4.
She then places the heel of one hand in the
center of her chest, with her other hand on top.
5.
Ms. Williams positions her body so that her shoulders
are directly over her hands.
6.
Keeping her arms straight
pushes straight down about 2 inches on Molly’s chest, and then lets the chest
to return to its normal position. Her compressions are hard and fast yet
smooth, and not jerky.
7.
Counting out loud
(one and two and three) she does about 30 chest compressions at the rate
of two per second. She repeats the steps are
breathing into Molly’s mouth twice again.
Medic's
soon arrived as Molly becomes responsive again, Ms. Williams stays with
Molly until her mom arrives.
As teachers and
caregivers part of the duty is to be prepared
in case of an emergency, so that means being ready
before one occurs. “The early childhood education environment that is organized
for possibilities of an emergency situation will be better prepared to respond
to an emergency when it actually occurs” (Robertson, C., 2016, pp 170). To do
that you first need to know about the
emergency to know how to act. Then put
together response plan based on that knowledge.
Part of the knowledge needed is how to perform or administer first aid
properly, so teachers and caregivers need to be trained in things like CPR, how
to help a choking child or even administer emergency medicine. Being able to do
these things can mean life or death for the child in the teachers care.
To be more
prepared there are other steps that can
be taken to help prepare you for a medical emergency. Such as, having emergency
information for each child to include; parents or guardian other emergency contact
info, parental release form giving the school/caregiver the right to treat the
child, health records. Next, make sure
to have a checklist of vital information like; school address, child’s name, a medical emergency that the operator may need
near the landlines. Most of all a first aid kit
that is easy for teachers to find but not children. The kit should include but
not be limited to instant ice packs,
bandages, gauze, safety pins, pads for eye injuries, tubes of cortisone and
antibiotic ointment. Also, eye wash, bottled
water, unbreakable thermometers, special instructions for kids with special
needs and steps on performing or administering first aid.
Reference:
Robertson, C. (2016). Safety, nutrition, and health
in early education (6th ed.). Boston, MA: Wadsworth/Cengage
Learning.
Casedra,
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed this post as well.Your steps were clear, simple, and easy to follow.