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Question
- what should you do if the chest does not rise during a breath?part 3: child cpr (1 year to puberty)1. how is child cpr different from adult cpr?2. compression depth for a child:3. when can you use one hand instead of two?4. compression to breath ratio for one rescuer:part 4: infant cpr (under 1 year old)1. how do you check responsiveness in an infant?where do you check for a pulse in an infant?3. hand/finger placement for infant compressions:4. compression depth for an infant:5. how are rescue breaths different for infants?1. what does aed stand for?
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- Re-tilt the head to re-open the airway and attempt the breath again; if still unsuccessful, begin CPR immediately.
PART 3: CHILD CPR (1 year to puberty)
- Child CPR uses shallower compressions, may use one hand for compressions on smaller children, and has a lower compression depth compared to adult CPR.
- About 2 inches (5 cm), or one-third the depth of the child's chest.
- When the child is small enough that one hand can provide adequate compression depth.
- 30:2
PART 4: INFANT CPR (Under 1 Year Old)
- Tap the infant's foot and shout to see if they respond; check for any movement or noise.
- Check the brachial pulse on the inside of the upper arm, between the elbow and shoulder.
- Use two fingers (index and middle) placed on the center of the infant's chest, just below the nipple line.
- About 1.5 inches (4 cm), or one-third the depth of the infant's chest.
- Rescue breaths for infants are gentler; cover the infant's mouth and nose with your mouth, and give small, slow breaths to make the chest rise visibly.
- Automated External Defibrillator