Introduction
Vocabulary
Human Body
Medical/Legal
Random
100

Do no further harm.

Q Monitor the person’s breathing and level of

consciousness.

Q Help the person rest in the most comfortable

position.

Q Keep the person from getting chilled or

overheated.

Q Reassure the person that you will help and that

EMS personnel have been called (if appropriate).

Q Give care consistent with your knowledge and

training as needed, and continue to watch for

First Aid care for sudden illness.

100

stand behind the person, with one foot in front


of the other for balance and stability. If possible,

place your front foot between the person’s feet.

Wrap your arms around the person’s waist.

Alternatively, if the person is a child, you can kneel

behind the child, wrapping your arms around the

child’s waist. Find the person’s navel by placing

one finger on the person’s navel, and the adjacent

finger above the first. Make a fist with your other

hand and place the thumb side just above your

fingers. Cover your fist with your other hand and

give quick, inward and upward thrusts into the

person’s abdomen.

What are abdominal thrusts?

100


Recognizing that an emergency exists. 

Deciding to take action. 

Activating the EMS system. 

Giving care until EMS personnel take over. 

Role in EMS

100

A legal concept referring to the assumption that an unresponsive person would give permission to be helped if responsive.

What is implied consent.

100

The sooner someone

recognizes that a person is in cardiac arrest and

calls 9-1-1 or the designated emergency number,

the sooner people capable of providing advanced

life support will arrive on the scene.

Activation of the emergency medical

services (EMS) system.

200


• 

Do no further harm. 

Monitor the person's breathing and level of 

consciousness. 

Help the person rest in the most comfortable 

position. 

Keep the person from getting chilled or overheated. 

• 

Reassure the person by telling the person that 

you will help and that EMS personnel have been 

called (if appropriate). 

Give care consistent with your knowledge and 

training as needed, and continue to watch for 

changes in the person's condition.

Giving care to someone.

200

First, get the infant into position

for back blows. Place your forearm along the

infant’s back, cradling the back of the infant’s

head with your hand. Place your other forearm

along the infant’s front, supporting the infant’s jaw

with your thumb and fingers. (Be careful not to

cover the infant’s mouth with your hand while you

are supporting the infant’s jaw.) Turn the infant

over so that he or she is face-down along your

forearm. Lower your arm onto your thigh so that

the infant’s head is lower than his or her chest.

Continue to support the infant’s jaw with the

thumb and fingers of one hand while you firmly

strike the infant between the shoulder blades with

the heel of your other hand. Keep your fingers up

to avoid hitting the infant’s head or neck.

What are infant back blows?

200

is inflammation of the liver, an 

organ that performs many vital functions for 

the body. There are many different types and 

causes of hepatitis. Hepatitis B, hepatitis C 

and hepatitis D are caused by infection with 

bloodborne viruses. Chronic infection with the 

viruses that cause hepatitis B, C or D can lead 

to liver failure, liver cancer and other serious 

conditions. 

What is Hepatitis?

200

 Before you 

reach the person, try to form an initial impression about the person's condition and what is wrong. For 

example, does the person seem alert, or confused or sleepy? Look at the person's skin—does it appear to 

be its normal color, or does it seem pale, ashen (gray) or flushed? Is the person moving, or motionless? 

Does the person have any immediately identifiable injuries? Look for signs of a life-threatening illness 

or injury, such as loss of consciousness, trouble breathing or severe bleeding. If you see severe, life-

threatening bleeding, use the resources available to you to control the bleeding as soon as possible 

(see Chapter 6). 

What is your initial impression about the nature of the person's illness or injury?

200

....... Are spread when 

blood from an infected person enters the 

bloodstream of a person who is not infected. 

Bloodborne illnesses that are of particular 

concern include human immunodeficiency 

virus (HIV) infection and hepatitis B, C and D. 

Fortunately, although bloodborne pathogens 

can cause serious illnesses, they are not easily 

transmitted and are not spread by casual 

contact. Remember, for infection to occur, 

an infected person's blood must enter your 

bloodstream. This could happen through direct 

or indirect contact with an infected person's 

blood if it comes in contact with your eyes, the 

mucous membranes that line your mouth and 

nose, or an area of broken skin on your body. 

What is Bloodborne Pathogens.

300


• 

• 

State your name. 

State the type and level of training that you have (such as training in first aid or CPR). 

Explain what you think is wrong. 

Explain what you plan to do. 

Ask if you may help. 

How to get consent to assist?

300

position

yourself to the side and slightly behind the

person. For a child, you may need to kneel. Place

one arm diagonally across the person’s chest (to

provide support) and bend the person forward at

the waist so that the person’s upper body is as

close to parallel to the ground as possible. Firmly

strike the person between the shoulder blades

with the heel of your other hand.

What are back blows?

300

2 pairs of latex-free gloves 

Latex-free adhesive bandages 

(3 of each of the following sizes): 

0 1 x 3 inches 

0 3/4 x 3 inches 

o Large fingertip 

O Knuckle 

(5 

8 sterile gauze pads (2 x 2 inches) 

8 sterile gauze pads (4 x 4 inches) 

1 roll of adhesive cloth tape (21/2 yards x 

% inch) 

4 roller bandages (2 inches or 3 inches x 

4 yards) 

4 roller bandages (4 inches x 4 yards) 

First Aid Kit ingredients.

300

Make sure you have ready access to items that will make it easier to 

respond to an emergency, should one occur. Keep a first aid kit in your 

home and vehicle (Box 1-1), and know the location of the first aid kit and 

automated external defibrillator (AED) in your workplace. Download the 

American Red Cross First Aid app to your mobile device so that you always 

Cross 

Be Red 

have a first aid reference at your fingertips.

Preparing for emergencies.

300

Provided

by EMS personnel at the scene and

en route to the hospital, early advanced

life support gives the person access to

emergency medical care delivered by trained

professionals.

Early advanced life support.

400

occurs when blood flow to part of the

heart muscle is blocked (e.g., as a result of coronary artery

disease). Because the cells in the affected area of the

heart muscle are not receiving the oxygen and nutrients

they need, they die, causing permanent damage to the

heart muscle (Figure 3-1). Seeking advanced medical care

as soon as you recognize the signs and symptoms of a

heart attack can minimize the damage to the heart and may

save the person’s life.

Symptoms of heart attack.

400

Because cardiac arrest in children

often occurs as the result of a preventable

injury (such as trauma, drowning, choking or

electrocution), the Pediatric Cardiac Chain of

Survival has “prevention” as the first link.

Prevention for cardiac arrest.

400

 is a virus that invades and destroys the 

cells that help us to fight off infections. A 

person who is infected with HIV may look 

and feel healthy for many years. However, 

during this time, the virus is breaking down 

the person's immune system. Eventually, a 

person who is infected with HIV may develop 

acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). 

A person with AIDS is unable to fight off 

infections that a healthy person would be 

able to resist or control. The person dies from 

one of these infections. Although medications 

have been developed to help slow the 

progression of HIV infection, currently there is 

no cure. 

What is HIV?

400

The location of the emergency (the address, or 

nearby intersections or landmarks if the address 

is not known) 

• The nature of the emergency (e.g., whether 

police, fire or medical assistance is needed) 

• 

The telephone number of the phone being used 

A description of what happened 

The number of injured or ill people 

What help, if any, has been given so far, and by 

whom 

(5 

Call for emergency

400

 are pathogens that are 

expelled into the air when an infected person 

breathes, coughs or sneezes. Infection spreads 

when a person who is not infected inhales 

respiratory droplets containing the pathogens. 

Examples of airborne illnesses include 

tuberculosis and influenza. 

Airborne pathogens.

500


With this information, an ill or injured person can grant his or her consent for care. Someone who is 

unresponsive, confused or mentally impaired may not be able to grant consent. In these cases, the law 

assumes the person would give consent if he or she were able to do so.

Implied consent.

500

Next, place one hand along the

infant’s back, cradling the back of the infant’s

head with your hand. While continuing to support

the infant’s jaw with the thumb and fingers of

your other hand, support the infant between your

forearms and turn the infant over so that he or

she is face-up along your forearm. Lower your

arm onto your thigh so that the infant’s head is

lower than his or her chest. Place the pads of

two fingers in the center of the infant’s chest, on

the breastbone just below the nipple line. Press

down about 11⁄2 inches and then let the chest

return to its normal position, keeping your fingers

in contact with the breastbone. Each

What are infant chest thrusts?

500

CPR circulates oxygen-containing

blood to the brain and other vital organs,

helping to prevent brain damage and death.

Early CPR.

500

 is a bacterial infection of the 

lungs that is spread through the air from one 

person to another. Although tuberculosis 

primarily affects the lungs, it can also affect 

the bones, brain, kidneys and other organs. 

If not treated, tuberculosis can be fatal. 

Treatment is complex and involves taking 

many different medications over an extended 

period of time. 

What is tuberculosis?

500

After the person is resuscitated,

an interdisciplinary team of medical

professionals works to stabilize the person’s

medical condition, minimize complications,

and diagnose and treat the underlying cause

of the cardiac arrest to improve survival

outcomes.

Integrated post–cardiac arrest

care. After