QUESTION IMAGE
Question
- the first step when the aed arrives:
- where do you place the aed pads?
- what must everyone do before a shock is delivered?
- after a shock is delivered, what should you immediately do?
- can you use an aed on a child? on an infant?
Brief Explanations
- The first step is to turn on the AED, as this activates its voice prompts to guide subsequent actions.
- For adults/older children, place one pad on the upper right chest (below the collarbone) and the other on the lower left side of the chest (below the armpit, on the ribcage).
- Everyone must move away from the person, ensuring no physical contact, to avoid being shocked themselves and prevent interference with the AED's analysis.
- Immediately resume high-quality cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR), starting with chest compressions.
- AEDs can be used on children (ages 1-8): use child-specific pads if available, otherwise use adult pads with appropriate placement adjustments. For infants (under 1 year), use an infant-specific AED system if possible; if not, use child pads or adult pads with a dose attenuator, and place pads on the front and back of the chest.
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- Turn on the AED device.
- One pad on upper right chest (below collarbone), one pad on lower left chest (below armpit on ribcage).
- Move away from the person, with no physical contact.
- Immediately resume high-quality CPR, starting with chest compressions.
- Yes, you can use an AED on a child (use child-specific pads if available); you can use an AED on an infant (preferably an infant-specific system, or child pads/adult pads with a dose attenuator, placed front and back of the chest).