first aid-principles-and-practice-1208005555838235-9

49
FIRST AID Principles and Practice K.S. Chew Lecturer/Emergency Physician School of Medical Sciences Universiti Sains Malaysia

Upload: kong-huatmin

Post on 22-Jan-2018

407 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: First aid-principles-and-practice-1208005555838235-9

FIRST AIDPrinciples and Practice

K.S. ChewLecturer/Emergency Physician

School of Medical SciencesUniversiti Sains Malaysia

Page 2: First aid-principles-and-practice-1208005555838235-9

First aid….. it is better to know it and not need it than to need it and not know it.

Page 3: First aid-principles-and-practice-1208005555838235-9

“Whatever can go wrong, will.”

- Murphy Law

Page 4: First aid-principles-and-practice-1208005555838235-9
Page 5: First aid-principles-and-practice-1208005555838235-9

“Whatever can happen to one man can happen to every man.”

Lucius Annaeus Seneca (4 B.C.? – A.D.65)

Page 6: First aid-principles-and-practice-1208005555838235-9

Definition of First Aid

Page 7: First aid-principles-and-practice-1208005555838235-9

What is First Aid?

Definition:

• First aid is the immediate care given to an injured or suddenly ill person. First aid does not take the place of proper medical treatment.

Page 8: First aid-principles-and-practice-1208005555838235-9

First Aid

• Immediate care given to an injured or suddenly ill person

– Without any proper medical equipment

– Temporary assistance until arrival of competent medical care

– Does not take the place of proper medical treatment

Page 9: First aid-principles-and-practice-1208005555838235-9

Who provides first aid?

• Police, Bomba/firefighters, JPA staffs

• St. John’s Ambulance members, Red Crescent members, Scouts, Girl Guides

• Bystanders, public members

• Relatives, family members, friends

• Workmates, teachers

• Medical students, anyone ……YOU!

Page 10: First aid-principles-and-practice-1208005555838235-9

Principles of First Aid

Page 11: First aid-principles-and-practice-1208005555838235-9

Principle #1: First, do no harm

Know what to do and know what NOT to do

Page 12: First aid-principles-and-practice-1208005555838235-9

First Do No Harm

• Do no harm does not mean do nothing.

• The wisdom is not just to know what to do, but what NOT to do

• Sometimes the best thing you can do for a casualty is to call for help.

• Provide comfort and assurance to the casualty may be the only thing you can do

Page 13: First aid-principles-and-practice-1208005555838235-9

First Do No Harm

• Use treatments you know of that are most likely to benefit a casualty

• Do not use a treatment that you are not sure about “just for the sake of trying”

Page 14: First aid-principles-and-practice-1208005555838235-9
Page 15: First aid-principles-and-practice-1208005555838235-9
Page 16: First aid-principles-and-practice-1208005555838235-9
Page 17: First aid-principles-and-practice-1208005555838235-9

Principle #2: First Aid Is Not An Exact Science And Is Open To

Error

Page 18: First aid-principles-and-practice-1208005555838235-9

First Aid Is Not An Exact Science

• First aid is practiced by people from all walks of life

• Therefore there are great variations in terms of methods and practice

• A casualty may not respond as you hoped no matter how good and how hard you try

Page 19: First aid-principles-and-practice-1208005555838235-9

First Aid Is Not An Exact Science

• Don’t feel bad if the casualty don’t respond as you would like him to.

• If you have done your best, your conscience should be clear.

• You may also have to deal with your own fear in real life situations

Page 20: First aid-principles-and-practice-1208005555838235-9
Page 21: First aid-principles-and-practice-1208005555838235-9

Principle #3: First Aid is about Putting First Things First

Page 22: First aid-principles-and-practice-1208005555838235-9

First Things First

• Get your priority right

• If there are too many injuries in a casualty, treat the most urgent injuries first

• If there are too many casualties– First, call for help– Treat the ones with the highest chance of

survival

Page 23: First aid-principles-and-practice-1208005555838235-9
Page 24: First aid-principles-and-practice-1208005555838235-9

Don’t treat him. Forget it!

Page 25: First aid-principles-and-practice-1208005555838235-9

They are also not your priority. Keep them aside and leave them to chat with each other!

Page 26: First aid-principles-and-practice-1208005555838235-9
Page 27: First aid-principles-and-practice-1208005555838235-9

• The first step to get our priority right is to know and recognize what is an emergency and what is not an emergency!

• Sometimes it is very difficult, e.g. heart attack can be silent

• Hollywood emergencies don’t always exist in real life

First Things First

Page 28: First aid-principles-and-practice-1208005555838235-9
Page 29: First aid-principles-and-practice-1208005555838235-9

Hollywood Heart Attack

Page 30: First aid-principles-and-practice-1208005555838235-9

Recognize An Emergency

• Factors that determine whether bystander recognize an emergency:

• Severity: motor-vehicle crash• Physical distance: the closer, the more

noticeable• Relationship: knowing the victim, the more

noticeable, e.g. mother and child• Time exposed: the longer exposed, the

more noticeable

Page 31: First aid-principles-and-practice-1208005555838235-9

Principle #4: Safety Is Of Utmost Importance In First Aid

Page 32: First aid-principles-and-practice-1208005555838235-9
Page 33: First aid-principles-and-practice-1208005555838235-9
Page 34: First aid-principles-and-practice-1208005555838235-9
Page 35: First aid-principles-and-practice-1208005555838235-9

Why Some Bystander Refuse To Help?

• Ignorance– Hiding own fear and incompetency

• Confused about what is an emergency– Too much Hollywood movies

• Characteristics of the emergency situation– The blood, smell, vomitus

• Fear it may be fake– Fear own safety; disguised as emergency

Page 36: First aid-principles-and-practice-1208005555838235-9
Page 37: First aid-principles-and-practice-1208005555838235-9

One important strategy that people use to avoid action is to refuse (consciously or

unconsciously) to acknowledge the emergency situation

Page 38: First aid-principles-and-practice-1208005555838235-9

Other Excuses

• It could be harmful– HIV infection

• Helping doesn’t matter– Victim is drunk

• Obstacles may prevent helping– Drowning victim in a mining pool (bystander

doesn’t know how to swim)

Page 39: First aid-principles-and-practice-1208005555838235-9

Decide to help

If you decide to help, you must:

• Feel confident to help

• Take time to help

• Put the potential risks of helping in perspective

• Take charge at an emergency scene

• Comfortable in seeing a victim who is bleeding or vomiting

Page 40: First aid-principles-and-practice-1208005555838235-9

Chain of Survival

Page 41: First aid-principles-and-practice-1208005555838235-9

RECOGNITION

Is this an emergency condition?

DECIDE TO HELP

CONTACT EMS if

needed or if not sure

ASSESS SCENE AND VICTIM

FIRST AID

NOYES

MEDICAL CARE ARRIVED

CHANCE OF RECOVERY WITHOUT MEDICAL

CARE ASSURED

Page 42: First aid-principles-and-practice-1208005555838235-9

Scene Survey

• Scene safety

• Mechanism of injury

• Number of patients

Page 43: First aid-principles-and-practice-1208005555838235-9

RECOGNITION

Is this an emergency condition?

DECIDE TO HELP

CONTACT EMS if

needed or if not sure

ASSESS SCENE AND VICTIM

FIRST AID

NOYES

MEDICAL CARE ARRIVED

CHANCE OF RECOVERY WITHOUT MEDICAL

CARE ASSURED

Page 44: First aid-principles-and-practice-1208005555838235-9

Need EMS?

Call EMS if

1. The victim’s condition life threatening or could get worse

2. The victim need the skills or equipment of EMS

3. Distance or traffic could cause a delay in getting to hospital

4. If you are not sure

Page 45: First aid-principles-and-practice-1208005555838235-9

What Information To Relay

• Identify yourself• E: Exact Location• T: Type of event• H: Hazard• A: Access• N: Number of casualties involved• E: Existing emergency services• Put down phone only if asked to

Page 46: First aid-principles-and-practice-1208005555838235-9

History

• Symptoms

• Allergies

• Medicatios

• Past Medical History

• Last oral intake

• Events leading up to the illness or injury

Page 47: First aid-principles-and-practice-1208005555838235-9

Physical Examination

• Deformity• Open wound• Tenderness• Swelling

• For extremities• Remember to add Pulses, Movement, Sensation (PMS)

Page 48: First aid-principles-and-practice-1208005555838235-9

Seven Essential First Aid Interventions

1. Call for ambulance

2. DO NOT move and DO NOT allow movement unnecessarily of a trauma casualty

3. Perform chin lift or head tilt chin lift

4. Mouth-to-mouth breathing (if willing) especially in children, drowning or poisoning

Page 49: First aid-principles-and-practice-1208005555838235-9

5. Chest compression

6. Operate an automated external defibrillator

7. Stop any bleeding

Seven Essential First Aid Interventions