Oxygen
First Aid for Aquatic Injuries Course
Do you have a new
pool?
Perhaps an old pool.
Are you ready for an emergency?
Every year more than
4,000 Americans die from drowning and many more suffer from
near-drowning events.
According to the 1998 National Sporting Goods Association (NSGA)
Annual Sports Participation Survey, 58.2 million Americans
participated more than once in swimming during the year. The same
study identified nearly 30 million people who participated in power
boating, sailing, kayaking, rafting or canoeing.
When swimmers and boaters have near-drowning accidents, water in their
lungs keeps their lungs from working properly and they don't get an
adequate amount of oxygen. This may cause secondary drowning; victims
appear to survive an incident only to die at home a few hours later.
Administering 100 percent oxygen first aid immediately after an
accident improves the victim's survival chances.
For nearly a decade, DAN has preached the benefits of providing oxygen
to injured scuba divers. During that time more than 80,000 people
worldwide have been trained in this first aid skill. In March of 1999,
DAN Services, Inc., a wholly owned for-profit subsidiary of Divers
Alert Network, launched the Oxygen First Aid for Aquatic Emergencies
(Aquatics) program. Its goal is to extend the life-saving
skills of oxygen first aid to people who live and play in and around
water. Providing high concentrations of oxygen to near-drowning
victims in the first few minutes after rescue can prevent serious or
even fatal complications.
Course
Objective
This
course, Oxygen First Aid for Aquatic Emergencies, or Aquatic Oxygen
Provider, represents training designed to educate the public to
recognize possible aquatic related injuries and to provide emergency
oxygen first aid while activating the local emergency medical services
(EMS) and / or arranging for evacuation to the nearest medical
facility.
Learning
Objectives
Participants demonstrate mastery of the following to successfully
complete the course:
Describe
the role and function of the cardiac and respiratory systems in the
human body.
Identify and describe the major causes of aquatic accidents.
Describe the mechanisms of drowning.
Describe the benefits to the victim of using oxygen first aid.
Skill
Performance Objectives
Participants demonstrate mastery of the following to successfully
complete the course:
Demonstrate the set up and use of the emergency oxygen equipment used
in this course.
Demonstrate rescue breathing and one-rescuer CPR.
Identify the indications for supplemental oxygen first aid use.
Demonstrate the first aid response of a non-breathing swimmer with a
pulse.
Demonstrate the first aid response for a non-breathing swimmer with no
pulse.
Demonstrate the first aid response for a breathing swimmer.
Demonstrate the first aid response for a swimmer who stops breathing
during care.