A) 5 back blows and 3 abdominal thrusts B) 5 back blows and 5 chest compressions C) 5 back blow and 3 chest compressions D) 5 back blows and 5 abdominal thrusts
A) Give 5 abdominal thrusts B) Sweep out the mouth C) Reattempt the breaths D) Reposition the victim's airway and reattempt 2 rescue breaths
A) Obtain consent from the victim to provide care. B) Check to make sure she is still breathing. C) Figure out what happened to the victim. D) Ask what types of symptoms she is experiencing.
A) A victim with minor bleeding to head. B) A victim with intermittent abdominal pain. C) A victim that has fallen from ten feet or higher. D) A victim with an obvious deformity.
A) On their back B) On their stomach with their head facing one side C) Facing the ground D) H.A.INE.S. Position
A) Pack-strap carry B) Two-person seat carry C) Beach drag D) Clothes drag
A) When used by a single rescuer, BVMs allow easy coordination with chest compressions. B) Monitoring the victim for full exhalation is not required. C) Two rescuers need to operate the BVM. D) BVMs are readily available at emergency scenes.
A) Summon EMS B) Perform a primary assessment C) Size up the scene D) Check for responsiveness
A) Using the heel of your hand to give the chest thrusts B) Positioning the infant so that the head is lower than the chest C) Giving 30 chest thrusts then 2 back blows D) Standing slightly behind the infant with one arm around the chest
A) The middle of the abdomen, just above the navel B) In the center of the breastbone C) On the rib cage D) In the middle of the abdomen, just below the navel |