Choking

Conscious Choking

  • Ask, “Are you choking?
  • If a person is unable to cough, breath or speak, activate EMS

Adult and Child

  • Stand behind the victim with one foot in-between the victims feet and your other foot behind you.
  • Place the flat side of your fist just above the patients belly button. Grab the back of your fist with your other hand.
  • Administer abdominal thrusts, pulling inward and upward, until the object comes out or the patient becomes unconscious.

Infant

  • Support the infant’s face and place body on your forearm.
  • Keep the infant’s head lower than the feet.
  • Administer 5 back blows between the shoulder blades with the palm of your hand.
  • Support the infant’s head. Turn the baby over onto your other forearm. Give 5 chest thrusts.
  • Continue back blows and chest thrusts until object comes out or infant becomes unconscious.

Special Circumstances:

  • If the patient is pregnant or too large to reach around, give chest thrusts instead.
  • If you are giving someone abdominal thrusts and the person goes unconscious, lower the patient safely to the ground.
  • Activate EMS, send someone to call 911

Unconscious Choking

  • Give 30 chest compressions
  • Open the airway and check the mouth for a foreign body. If something is seen sweep it out with a finger. Use the pinky finger for an infant.
  • Attempt rescue breaths. If breaths do not make the chest rise, reposition head and reattempt rescue breaths.
  • Give 30 more chest compressions
  • Open the airway again and check the mouth for a foreign body. If something is seen sweep it out with a finger. Use the pinky finger for an infant.
  • Give 2 more breaths.
  • If breaths do not make the chest rise, reposition head and reattempt rescue breaths. Continue compressions, foreign body check, breathing attempts until air goes in and chest rises.
  • If air goes in and makes the chest rise, check for a pulse.
  • If victim has no pulse and is still not breathing normally, continue CPR with cycles of 30 compressions to 2 breaths.
  • If pulse is present, but no normal breathing, start rescue breathing.