Before Giving Care
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Transcript Before Giving Care
Chapter 3: Before Giving Care
Introduction
In this lesson, you will learn—
That your top priority is to ensure your own safety.
To protect yourself from disease transmission.
How to properly move a victim.
The basic legal information you will need to know before
giving care.
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AMERICAN RED CROSS FIRST AID–RESPONDING TO EMERGENCIES
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Preventing Disease Transmission
Diseases that can pass from other people, animals, insects or
things are called infectious diseases.
Four conditions must be present for a disease to be transmitted.
If any of these conditions are absent, disease transmission is not
possible:
A pathogen is present.
Enough of the pathogen is present to cause infection.
The pathogen passes through an entry site (eyes, mucus
membranes, open cuts in skin).
A person is susceptible to the pathogen.
Diseases can be spread through direct contact transmission and
indirect contact transmission.
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AMERICAN RED CROSS FIRST AID–RESPONDING TO EMERGENCIES
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Preventing Disease Transmission
Give care in a manner that minimizes the risk of disease
transmission.
Standard precautions is an approach to infection control that
encourages you to consider all bodily fluids as infectious and to
follow safety measures to prevent exposure.
Good personal hygiene habits, such as frequent hand washing,
help to prevent disease transmission.
Personal protective equipment is the equipment that helps keep
you from direct contact with infected materials.
To learn more about preventing disease transmission, enroll in an
American Red Cross Bloodborne Pathogens Training: Preventing
Disease Transmission course.
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AMERICAN RED CROSS FIRST AID–RESPONDING TO EMERGENCIES
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Removing Disposable Gloves
Partially remove the first glove by pinching the
glove at the wrist, being careful to touch only the
glove’s outside surface.
Pull the glove toward the fingertips without
completely removing it.
The glove is now partially inside out.
With the partially gloved hand, pinch the
exterior of the second glove.
Pull the second glove toward the fingertips until
it is inside out and then remove it completely.
Grasp both gloves with your free hand, touching
only the clean interior surface of the glove.
Discard the gloves in an appropriate container.
Wash your hands thoroughly with soap and
water.
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AMERICAN RED CROSS FIRST AID–RESPONDING TO EMERGENCIES
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Obtaining Consent to Give Care
One important aspect of giving care is to get permission.
Before giving care to a conscious adult, get consent to give care.
To get consent, you must tell the victim:
Who you are.
Your level of training.
The care you would like to give.
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AMERICAN RED CROSS FIRST AID–RESPONDING TO EMERGENCIES
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Obtaining Consent to Give Care
(continued)
Do not give care to a conscious victim who refuses it.
Special situations:
The conscious victim is an infant or child.
When the victim is unconscious or unable to respond
because of illness or injury, consent is implied.
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AMERICAN RED CROSS FIRST AID–RESPONDING TO EMERGENCIES
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Good Samaritan Laws
All states have enacted Good Samaritan laws.
This is a law that protects citizen responders who are willing
to provide emergency care to injured or ill persons without
accepting anything in return.
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AMERICAN RED CROSS FIRST AID–RESPONDING TO EMERGENCIES
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Reaching and Moving Victims
You should move a victim only when you can do so safely and
when there is an immediate danger.
Before you act, consider the following limitations to ensure
moving one or more victims quickly and safely:
Dangerous conditions at the scene
The size of the victim
Your physical ability
Whether others can help you
The victim’s condition
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AMERICAN RED CROSS FIRST AID–RESPONDING TO EMERGENCIES
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Emergency Moves
Four common types of emergency moves are:
Walking assist.
Pack-strap carry.
Two-person seat carry.
Clothes drag.
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AMERICAN RED CROSS FIRST AID–RESPONDING TO EMERGENCIES
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Closing
Consider your own safety.
Protect yourself from disease transmission.
Check the scene for safety.
Obtain consent.
If you must move a victim, be sure to do so in a manner that is
safe for you and will not cause the victim any further harm.
Questions?
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