Fainting occurs when your brain temporarily doesn't receive
enough blood supply, causing you to lose consciousness. This loss of
consciousness is usually brief. Fainting might have no medical significance. Or
the cause can be a serious disorder, often involving the heart. Therefore,
treat loss of consciousness as a medical emergency until the signs and symptoms
are relieved, and the cause is known. Talk to your doctor if you faint more
than once.
If someone else faints
Position the person on his or her back. If there are no
injuries and the person is breathing, raise the person's legs above heart level about 12 inches (30 centimeters) if possible. Loosen belts, collars or
other constrictive clothing.
To reduce the chance of fainting again, don't get the person
up too quickly. If the person doesn't regain consciousness within one minute,
call 911 or your local emergency number.
Check for breathing. If the person isn't breathing, begin
CPR. Call 911 or your local emergency number. Continue CPR until help arrives
or the person begins to breathe.
If the person was injured in a fall associated with a faint,
treat bumps, bruises or cuts appropriately. Control bleeding with direct
pressure.
3 comments:
useful tips! keep it up author💯
Thanks for the knowledges!
good tips!ill follow that step if i hve situation like that!
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