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What to do if someone is choking: When to get involved

It could happen to you someday — you’re sitting with your family at a favorite restaurant. Suddenly a noise grabs your attention. Someone across the room is coughing hard, trying to clear his throat.

That happens all the time in restaurants, but this guy isn’t stopping, and others are also starting to notice the commotion. You vaguely remember that helping isn’t always the best choice, so you sit there with everyone else hoping he’ll work it out on his own. How do you know when to step in when someone is choking? Keep reading and we’ll share some of the signs to look for to know that the situation has escalated to the point where you should get involved.

What is Choking?

Choking is what medical professionals call a foreign body obstruction. Put simply, something like food gets stuck in the throat, blocking the passage of air to the lungs. A person with foreign body obstruction can’t breathe in fully or expel the air from their lungs. Choking is the fourth leading cause of death from an injury and a true medical emergency if the blockage doesn’t clear.

What Causes Choking to happen?

Food is the answer that might first pop into your head, but there are other possibilities such as:

Food is the most common cause, though, especially in children and the elderly. Use special caution with foods like hot dogs, grapes, popcorn, nuts, and peanut butter. These are some of the most common foods that may lead to choking.

Types of choking

All forms of choking are serious, but there are variations and each requires different emergency actions.

Mild choking

Mild Choking is due to a partial blockage. When this happens, the person might be able to speak and will be trying to cough. You might hear wheezing or a gagging sound.

You should encourage them to cough hard to clear the blockage. In some cases, back blows with the heel of your hand can loosen the object. Bend the person over at the waist to help gravity pull out the obstruction as you apply the blows.

Severe Choking

Severe choking means there is a full airway blockage and this is a medical emergency. Have someone call 911 while you attempt to clear the blockage. Before doing anything, assess the patient to look for signs that indicate a full obstruction, such as:

For a conscious victim, bend their body forward at the waist and do back blows while standing behind them. After five blows, pull their body up and reach your arms around their abdomen. Then:

Continue the maneuver until help arrives, the victim loses consciousness, or the object comes out. If the person choking does pass out, roll them on their side so fluids like saliva or vomit do not go into their lungs. If they stop breathing or have no pulse, do CPR until help arrives.

What to do if a baby is choking

For conscious choking in an infant less than 12 months:

Continue this process until the baby loses consciousness or the object comes out and the infant starts to breathe.

If the choking victim is an unconscious infant less than 12 months:

Begin infant CPR immediately. After a full round of rescue breaths and chest compressions, look into the baby’s mouth, searching for the obstruction. If you see it, reach in and try to remove it. If not, continue CPR. Recheck the mouth after each round of breaths and compressions.

What to do if a child is choking

The actions for a choking child and adult are very similar.

For a conscious child:

For an unconscious choking child:

What to do if an adult is choking

The most important thing to remember in any choking emergency is to get help. Ask someone to call 911. If no one is around, try yelling for help. If no one comes, start choking assistance for one round and then call 911 yourself.

Always verify that someone is choking before doing back blows and performing abdominal thrusts. Otherwise, you may turn a partial obstruction into a full one. Ask the choking victim if they need help and look for the universal signs of choking before doing anything. Also, do not do finger sweeps unless you can see what is blocking the throat. You might inadvertently push the obstruction down farther.

Thousands of people die every year from choking. The more people that know how to help, the better chance the choking victim has of surviving a choking emergency. For full instructor-led training on choking, CPR, and assisting with other medical emergencies, be sure to check out ProTrainings’ free CPR and first aid training courses.

Sources:

https://www.nsc.org/home-safety/safety-topics/choking-suffocation
https://www.babycenter.com/0_infant-first-aid-for-choking-and-cpr-an-illustrated-guide_9298.bc

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