Note: Your progress in watching these videos WILL NOT be tracked. These training videos are the same videos you will experience when you take the full ProFirstAid program. You may begin the training for free at any time to start officially tracking your progress toward your certificate of completion.
In this lesson, you'll learn how to use an AED on a child in cardiac arrest. The methods of defibrillating a child are basically the same as defibrillating an adult. One important distinction involves AED pad size.
AED pads come in an adult size and a pediatric size, for patients less than 55 pounds or roughly 25 kilograms.
Pro Tip #1: If you do not have pediatric pads and the patient is less than 55 pounds, use the adult pads. It's far better to use the wrong size pads than it is to forego using an AED.
Remember, when using an AED, there are a couple of important things to keep in mind as it relates to your surroundings and scene safety.
If for some reason the scene isn't safe enough to use an AED, drag or move the patient to a safer area where you won't have to worry about explosives or electrocution from water and then use the AED.
Just like the Adult AED lesson, let's assume a few things:
Remember, when it comes to AEDs, they supply their own instructions after you turn them on. If ever confused, simply follow the prompts as the AED gives them.
Pro Tip #2: How do you know what the victim weighs? Easy, you guess. If it's even close, you'll probably be fine using adult pads. However, be aware that pad placement will be different for victims under 55 pounds, which you'll learn in the next lesson – Infant AED.
Warning: Cutting off clothing is better than removing as the victim could have a spinal injury which could be made worse by moving them.
Pro Tip #3: You want to minimize compression interruptions. Don't delay or interrupt compressions any longer than absolutely necessary and this includes after a shock is delivered. Go right back into your compressions.
Continue with CPR until the AED interrupts you. At some point, it will reanalyze the victim's heart rhythm and again advise you on what to do next. If the AED advises a shock, do that. If it advises you to NOT shock the victim, continue with CPR only, again over the pads. (The AED will continue to reanalyze.)
Pro Tip #4: Don't remove the pads and/or turn off the AED, even if it advises you to NOT shock the victim. It's still monitoring the victim and may have different instructions for you at some point.
Continue this cycle of CPR, re-analyzation, charging, shock, back into CPR until EMS arrives, the patient is responsive and breathing normally, or someone who's equally trained or better can relieve you.
When using an AED, there are several precautions to keep in mind. Some of these may be obvious (and a repeat of what you've already learned in this course), while others may not be.