The ratio of compressions to breaths with one rescuer on any age victim.
What is 30:2
The acronym used in the secondary assessment.
What is SAMPLE?
It's what AED stands for.
What is Automated External Defibrillator?
The constant, visual technique for guarding patrons in the water.
What is scanning?
James Naismith invented this sport at a YMCA in Springfield, Mass in 1891.
What is basketball?
The rate of compressions per minute.
What is 100-120?
The "F" in FAST, used to determine if a stroke has occurred.
What is face?
Where the pads are placed on an adult.
What is upper right and lower left of the chest?
The name for when several lifeguards are assigned an area of the pool to cover.
What is zone coverage?
The four core values of the YMCA.
What are caring, honesty, respect and responsibility?
The hand position for giving compressions with one rescuer on an infant.
What is two three fingers or one hand on the center of the chest just below the nipple line?
Ultimately, this controls bleeding.
What is pressure?
What you tell people when the AED is about to analyze or shock the victim.
What is clear the victim?
The technique used to stabilize a victim's head, neck and spine in the water.
What is the head splint technique?
It's what YMCA stands for.
What is Young Men's Christian Association?
The ratio of compressions to breaths with two rescuers on a child or infant.
What is 15:2?
The basic treatment for diabetic emergencies.
What is give sugar in the form of glucose tablets, candy or fruit juice?
The two conditions a victim's chest should be in to use an AED.
What is dry and bare?
The special technique used in a passive victim at the surface from the front rescue.
What is the J or U hook technique?
William G. Morgan invented this sport at a YMCA in Holyoke, Mass in 1895.
What is volleyball?
The number of seconds in which one breath is given during rescue breathing on a child or infant.
What is 3 seconds?
What not to give to a victim of shock even if they ask for it.
What is food or water?
The condition of the heart in which the ventricles quiver without any organized rhythm, and the electrical impulses fire at random.
What is ventricular fibrillation or V fib?
The entry used when the lifeguard is 5 feet above 5 or more feet of water.
What is the compact jump?
The year the YMCA was founded.
What is 1844?