Artificial Respiration
Technique to provide breaths to a person who is not breathing.
Artificial respiration, also known as rescue breathing, is a critical procedure used to manually assist or stimulate breathing in a person who is not breathing or not breathing adequately. Techniques include mouth-to-mouth resuscitation and using a bag-valve mask to deliver breaths. When performing artificial respiration, ensure the airway is open using the head-tilt/chin-lift maneuver, seal your mouth over the casualtys mouth, and blow air into their lungs until the chest rises.
It is an essential component of cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR), which also includes chest compressions. Continue rescue breaths until professional help arrives or the casualty starts breathing normally .
Open the airway using the head-tilt, chin-lift manoeuvre
Pinch the casualty’s nose shut and seal your mouth over theirs
Give two breaths, watching for the chest to rise
Continue with chest compressions if necessary
Artificial respiration, also known as rescue breathing, is a technique used to assist or stimulate breathing in a casualty who is not breathing or is breathing inadequately. This is part of CPR (Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation) and involves blowing air into the casualty's lungs.
ReferenceFirst Basic Life Support (DRSABCD)