The Pediatric Chain of Survival
Prevention - Early CPR - Early Activation of EMS - Early ALS
PREVENTION
The pediatric chain of survival is different from the adult for some very good reasons. Lets take a look at the first link; prevention. Unintentional injuries are the number one cause of death in children and young people in the United States. Most of these injuries can be prevented with proper education and information. If we can prevent an emergency from happening in the first place, we are that much more effective in saving the lives of our children.
In an adult, child, and infant CPR First Aid class, it is the responsibility of the BLS instructor to not only teach students how to effectively respond to pediatric emergencies, but also how to prevent them from happening in the first place. It is not enough to just teach CPR. Since most of the students in our class will never actually have to do CPR on an infant or child (some will), it is important that prevention issues that have daily significance are addressed. In this manner instructors and training programs make the most of the time and also are able to effectively deal with emergencies before they even happen.
For example: As I write this article I am at the park with my one and half year old son. A gentleman has just arrived to use the park to run his rather large Pit Bull Rottweiler mix....with no leash around a park full of kids. Hmm… I have nothing against family pets, but animals by nature can be unpredictable, and in my own personal experience when someone says “he doesn’t bite” he usually does just that. This is why there are city ordinances made to “prevent” issues. Thats kinda like riding in your car with all 5 of your kids, rushing through traffic becuase your late and no one is wearing a seat belt. I have seen my share of animal attacks and certainly am not interested in visiting the ER this morning. So I will take my son far out of any potential harms way. This would be prevention. Prevention in this situation might mean bringing the family pet at a time when there isn't so many kids. But today, for me and my son it means find a place to play with less of a risk. I like 0 risk factors.
Prevention is a proactive way of dealing with emergencies, whereas CPR, bleeding control, etc.. would be reactive. The reactive measures have there place, but the proactive measures give us the much more effective silent victories over emergencies and that is why prevention is the first link in the pediatric chain of survival.
Michael Morales EMT-Paramedic
For corporate training information
please contact us,
www.vitalethics@gmail.com
or click here to see our class calendar.
Providing American Red Cross, and American Health and Safety Institute Certification. Instructors available on site
Advanced Courses
ACLS PALS Provider Classes, Online Advanced Cardiac Life Support, Pediatric Advanced Cardiac Life Support Provider, Certification Renewal and Re certification Courses ECG, EKG and Instructor courses
Basic Courses
BLS Classes and Courses, CPR AED and First Aid Certification Classes, Health Care Provider BLS, CPR for the Professional Rescuer Online CPR and Adult Child Infant CPR/AED First Aid Basics, Pediatric First Aid and Automated External Defibrillators Programs and Instructor Classes
Blood Borne Pathogens and Preventing Disease Transmission Certification Courses
Proudly Serving California
Oakland
Santa Ana
Anaheim
Riverside
Bakersfield
Stockton
Fremont
Glendale
Huntington Beach
Modesto |
San Bernardino
Chula Vista
Costa Mesa
Downey
Santa Rosa
Irvine
Moreno Valley
Corona
East Los Angeles
Concord
|
Lancaster
Thousand Oaks
Vallejo
Palmdale
El Monte
Inglewood
Simi Valley
Escondido
Sunnyvale
Fontana |
Orange
Rancho Cucamonga
Fullerton
Hayward
Torrance
Pasadena
Los Angeles
San Diego
San Jose
San Francisco
|
Fresno
Sacramento
Oxnard
Garden Grove
Oceanside
Ontario
Santa Clarita
Salinas
Pomona
Long Beach
|
|