CPR/AED for Professional Rescuers and First Aid: Exam A
CPR/AED for Professional Rescuers and First Aid: Exam A IMPORTANT: Read all instructions before beginning the exam. INSTRUCTIONS: Mark all answers in pencil on a separate answer sheet. Do not write on this exam. The questions on this exam are multiple choice. Read each question carefully. Then choose the best answer and fill in that circle on the answer sheet. If you wish to change an answer, erase your first answer completely. Return this exam to your instructor when you are finished. EXAMPLE ANSWER SHEET xx. XX. Why does the American Red Cross teach this course? a. To help people stay calm in emergencies. b. To help people make appropriate decisions when they are confronted with an emergency. c. To help people in an emergency keep a victim’s injuries from getting worse until emergency medical services (EMS) personnel arrive and take over. d. All of the above 1. How can you best protect yourself from possible bloodborne pathogen transmission when providing care? a. Ask the victim first if they have any communicable diseases. b. Thoroughly wash your hands before providing care. c. Use first aid supplies, such as dressings and bandages, as a barrier when in contact with the victim. d. Use personal protective equipment (PPE), such as disposable gloves and a breathing barrier, when providing care. 2. A 12-year-old child at a swim meet grabs their chest and begins to make wheezing noises. After you obtain consent to provide care, the child’s parent informs you that the child has a history of asthma, but does not have an inhaler nearby. What care should you provide? a. Give 5 back blows. b. Summon more advanced medical personnel and place the victim into a position that helps breathing. c. Tell the victim to use an inhaler borrowed from a bystander. d. Wait 20 minutes to see if the breathing difficulty goes away. 3. Your initial impression of a victim is based on: a. The victim’s initial vital signs. b. How the victim appears to you as you size up the scene. c. The victim’s SAMPLE history. d. What you have been told about the victim. 4. You and another lifeguard find an unresponsive adult on the floor in the locker room. You activate your facility’s EAP, size-up the scene, form an initial impression and perform a primary assessment. You find the victim is not moving or breathing, but has a pulse. You should summon EMS personnel, then: a. Give ventilations at a rate of 1about every 5-6 seconds. b. Give back blows and chest thrusts. c. Give quick breaths at the rate of 20 to 40 a minute. d. Perform CPR.
Written for
- Institution
- ISSA
- Course
- ISSA
Document information
- Uploaded on
- April 15, 2024
- Number of pages
- 10
- Written in
- 2023/2024
- Type
- Exam (elaborations)
- Contains
- Questions & answers
Subjects
-
cpraed for professional rescuers and first aid e