Know If Someone Is Choking
For the layperson, the signs of choking sometimes mimic those of heart attack, drowning or, in the case of infants, Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS). With a little education, you can learn to recognize whether someone is choking and even learn perform life-saving measures.
Instructions
Recognize the Symptoms of Choking
1. Ask the person, "Are you choking?" if you suspect someone is having breathing difficulties.
2. Know the international sign for choking: one or two hands clutching the throat.
3. Keep an eye out for signs of embarrassment or panic. These include abruptly leaving the table or room, wide eyes, clutching a surface or nearby person and suddenly looking down or away from nearby people.
4. Listen for labored, noisy breathing or wheezing.
5. Listen for crying if the victim is an infant.
6. Check to see whether the person is able to speak or cough.
7. Note whether the person's cough is forceful, in which case you should encourage him to continue coughing as hard as possible.
8. Look at the person's coloring. If she is very pale, turning blue or sweating heavily, she may be choking.
9. Check an unconscious victim for a medic alert bracelet, which may indicate a problem other than choking.
10. Ask bystanders about the events surrounding someone's loss of consciousness before assuming the problem is choking.
11. Designate someone nearby to call 911 and tell the dispatcher that someone is choking.
12. Begin the Heimlich Maneuver once you know that choking is the problem.
Tags: Know Someone, Know Someone Choking, whether person