Current location - Health Preservation Learning Network - Healthy weight loss - Detailed steps, standard actions and correct video flow of heimlich method for children's first aid
Detailed steps, standard actions and correct video flow of heimlich method for children's first aid
In life, both adults and children may encounter foreign bodies stuck in the respiratory tract, which is in danger of suffocation. Once the respiratory tract is stuck by a foreign body, you will face death at any time, and it is too late to go to the hospital. Therefore, learning heimlich's first aid method may save lives at a critical moment. Here, we will introduce the detailed steps, standard actions and correct video flow of heimlich method for children's first aid.

Heimlich first aid is a first aid method that parents should learn, which is very practical for children under three years old. For children under 3 years old, the rescuer wraps the child head down, puts one arm on the child's chest, then holds the child's cheekbones with his hands, and lets the child lie face down on the rescuer's knees, then slaps the child's back with his other hand for 5-6 times, and the child can stop moving when he spits out foreign objects.

After the above operations, the foreign body stuck in the child's throat still does not come out, so change a posture, and the rescuer kneels or takes a sitting position. The child is placed between his legs, facing forward, and the middle finger or forefinger of both hands is placed on the child's chest and under his upper abdomen, and then the child is quickly pressed upward, and this action is repeated until the stuck foreign body is discharged. Be careful not to use too much force here to prevent the baby's internal organs from being damaged.

In short, it is very common for children to be choked, and parents must take certain emergency measures. However, the heimlich law of children's first aid should not be used casually. In the case of acute respiratory obstruction, it is suggested that heimlich method should be used for children's first aid, and the intensity should be controlled to avoid damaging children's internal organs.