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Recognizing medical emergencies



Stopping bleeding with direct pressure
Stopping bleeding with direct pressure
Stopping bleeding with a tourniquet
Stopping bleeding with a tourniquet
Stopping bleeding with pressure and ice
Stopping bleeding with pressure and ice
Neck pulse
Neck pulse


Recognizing medical emergencies

Alternative Names:

Medical emergencies - how to recognize them
Information:


According to the American College of Emergency Physicians, the following are warning signs of a medical emergency:

WHAT TO DO

  • Remain calm.
  • Start CPR or rescue breathing if necessary and you know the proper technique.
  • Know the location and quickest route to the nearest emergency department.
  • Keep emergency phone numbers posted by the phone. Everyone in your household, including children, should know when and how to call these numbers. These numbers include police, fire department, poison control center, and ambulance services as well as your doctors' numbers and contact numbers for work and neighbor or nearby friend or relative.
  • Know at which hospital(s) your doctor practices and, if practical, go to that facility in an emergency.
  • Upon arriving at an emergency room, the person will be immediately evaluated. Life- or limb-threatening conditions will be treated first. People with conditions that are not life- or limb-threatening may have to wait.
  • Wear a medical identification tag if you have a chronic condition or look for one on a person who has any of the symptoms mentioned.
  • Obtain a personal emergency response system if you are elderly, especially if you live alone.
  • Place a semiconscious or unconscious person in the recovery position until the ambulance arrives. DO NOT move the person, however, if there has beenor may have been a neck injury.

CALL YOUR LOCAL EMERGENCY NUMBER (SUCH AS 911) FOR AN AMBULANCE IF

  • The person's condition is life-threatening (like a heart attack or severe allergic reaction).
  • Moving the person could cause further injury (for example, in case of a neck injury or motor vehicle accident).
  • Distance or traffic conditions might cause a delay in getting the victim to the hospital.
  • The person needs the skills or equipment of paramedics.
  • The person's condition could become life-threatening on the way to the hospital (for example, shortness of breath).




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