Random
Bleeding
Treatments
100

There are three layers of skin. What are they?

What is Epidermis, Dermis, and Hypodermis?

100

This type of bleeding is dark red and flows at a steady, non-pulsating rate.

What is Venous bleeding?

100

After cleaning a minor wound with soap and water, the next step is to apply an antiseptic and this type of covering.

What is a sterile dressing or bandage?

200

This is a superficial wound caused by skin rubbing or scraping against a hard surface.

What is an Abrasion?

200

The smallest blood vessels that often cause pinpoint, slow bleeding when scraped.

What are Capillaries?

200

The two primary initial actions for treating venous bleeding are direct pressure and compression bandaging.

What are Direct Pressure and Compression Bandaging?

300

Penetration of skin by sharp object (nails, tacks, ice picks, knives, teeth, needles)

What is a puncture wound?

300

This system relies on blood to be an essential part of its protective action against illness.

What is the Immune System?

300

Besides direct pressure, one must perform this life-saving action when dealing with severe arterial bleeding.

What is Activating EMS?

400

The outermost surface of the body that provides the first line of defense against external forces.

What is skin?

400

Capillary bleeding has a greater risk of this compared to arterial or venous bleeding.

What is Infection?

400

After treating venous bleeding with direct pressure, the victim should receive this.

What is Follow-up with a doctor?

500

A deep, jagged cut or tearing of the skin often caused by a blunt impact, unlike a clean incision.

What is a laceration? 

500

This type of bleeding is the most serious because a large volume of blood can be lost in a short period.

What is Arterial Bleeding?

500

The device that must be applied only if bleeding cannot be controlled by direct pressure or pressure points in an arterial bleed.

What is a Tourniquet?