Sunshine Billingual The Blog
    Top Picks
    Toddler Care

    Ball Art for Preschoolers & Toddlers – Let’s Paint!

    Infant

    Help — My Baby Won’t Nurse!

    Toddler Care

    Cute Very Hungry Caterpillar Craft for Preschool

    Important Pages:
    • MainHome
    • Blog
    • Programs/Tuition
    • Our Team
    • Himama app
    • Gallery
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions
    Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest
    Sunshine Billingual The Blog
    • MainHome
    • Programs/Tuition
    • Our Team
    • Himama app
    • Gallery
    • Contact Us
    • Infant

      5 simple bottle-feeding tips | BabyCenter

      Homemade Spiced Unsweetened Applesauce (20 Minutes)

      40 of the Best Halloween Books for Kids

      How painter’s tape could help your baby sleep better at night

      Win the September Swag Box!

    • Child Care

      Choosing the right childcare for your family

      Bringing Nutrition and Joy to Creative Childcare Centres

      4 Proven Childcare Marketing Tips

      Nappy change and toilet learning

      Telling a new story for early childhood

    • Toddler Care

      Rainbow Rice Construction Site – Busy Toddler

      30+ Very Hungry Caterpillar Crafts and Activities for Kids

      Fluffy Buckwheat Pancakes

      Best Frozen Foods (and How to Use Them)

      Easy Animal Shadow Puppets Craft with Printable

    • Preschool

      What the Best Preschools in Cleveland, Ohio Have in Common

      When Is the Right Time To Enroll in Preschool?

      The Best Phonics Tip from Phonics Teacher & Expert

      Why Preschool Class Size Matters

      5 Best Activities to Teach Opposites to Preschoolers

    • Learning

      6 Proven Leadership Tips from a Childcare Expert

      A Comprehensive Guide for Teachers

      [Webinar Recap] Transforming Challenging Behaviors into Engaged Learning: The Leader’s Role

      The Modern Resources Teachers Need to Simplify their Daily To-Do List & How to Ask for Them

      A Proven Guide for Early Childhood Teachers

    • Skill

      Help Your Child Prepare By Doing Preschool Puzzles

      Summer Learning Activities Your Kids Will Love

      How to Prevent Summer Learning Loss

      What to Do When Toddler Keeps Getting Out of Bed

      Tips for Creating a Homework Space for your Child

    • Activities

      Fostering a Love of the Outdoors in kids

      Immunity Booster Foods for Kids this monsoon

      Indoor games & activities for kids in monsoons

      Tummy Time Must know tips for Infants

      Top 5 Indoor Games for Your Toddler

    • Parenting

      [Expert Advice] How to Ask Your Boss for New Childcare Technology

      5 Surefire Ways to Get the Resources You Need from Your Center Director

      4 Must-Have Features in Your Dream Childcare Management System

      Why It’s Easier Than You Think to Simplify Center Management

      Empower Families to Self-Serve with These 4 Proven Tips

    • Leadership

      A Simple System to Help Boost Cashflow

      The Power of Connecting Families and Staff at Your Centers

      What Is Text Marketing in Childcare? How to Get Started in 3 Easy Steps

      3 Best Practices for Childcare Center Success in 2022

      Discover These 5 Proven Text Marketing Best Practices for Childcare

    • Features

      Summer Memories – All My Children Daycare & Nursery School

      New School Year Excitement – All My Children Daycare & Nursery School

      Faculty Training – All My Children Daycare & Nursery School

      Back-to-school mantras – All My Children Daycare & Nursery School

      Make healthy eating fun! – All My Children Daycare & Nursery School

    Sunshine Billingual The Blog
    Home » FYI New Guidelines on Choking and Infant Resus
    Infant

    FYI New Guidelines on Choking and Infant Resus

    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest WhatsApp
    Share
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest WhatsApp

    First of all, it goes without saying that if you’re doing BLW this is an area that you will have looked into already. (And if you haven’t… as they say on the adverts… just do it. Crazy not to.)

    Personally, I think every parent should try to investigate some basic infant resus, because as those little blighters become more mobile and more curious they have a habit of picking more daft objects up to check if they are food or not. I cannot tell you how high we had to keep our first daughter’s brightly coloured school erasers in order to keep them away from our younger child.

    From what I saw on our Facebook page this morning, it seems like this is a technique already advocated in the US and Australia, but for the benefit of the UK and anyone else who is interested, here is the latest video as featured in a Sky news report. 

    In fact, it differs only very slightly to the rather brilliant UK National Health Service video ‘How to help a choking child’.  

    Can you see, in the NHS video the baby rests on the woman’s arm throughout much of her resus? Whereas St John Ambulance are now saying that there will be better support if the child is on the arm AND thigh? A tiny difference but if it’s best practice, let’s do it! (Might have been better if the St John uniform wasn’t so dark, eh? Can you even see those trousers?)

     

    As an aside, it is also interesting to query the figures mentioned in the Sky News report, reproduced below. In a survey of parents of 1000 under-fives, 380 said they had seen their child choke, with only 50% knowing what to do in that event. There are two ways of looking at this… one, 190 children choked, and their parents didn’t know what to do but everyone (we assume, for Sky News would have looked for the goriest story possible) was okay. That’s encouraging (but still do your homework).

    The other way of looking at it is that parents STILL don’t know the difference between choking and gagging and some of the chokes were mis-represented gags. It is worth knowing the difference as going straight for resus when they’re dealing with a gag can cause babies to aspirate food.

    Gagging is actually a safety response to food travelling too far back into the mouth so when we see our babies gagging they are actually handling the problem and it’s best just to keep calm (or at least look calm) and wait until it passes. Choking, you will know about. The baby looks panicked, no or very little sound can come out, and lips may actually start turning blue. Be smart, educate yourself and know how to act quickly. 

    So all in all, it’s good news for the BLW crew, in that each and every one of us should already have considered choking, and how we will respond should it happen. (For the record, it happened once with my first child… dratted raw apple, and this below was her a minute later, after she had gotten over it and was onto a rice cake. It just never happened with my second.)

    FROM SKY NEWS TODAY

    “New first aid advice on how to help a choking baby has been issued to parents.

    St John Ambulance, the British Red Cross and St Andrew’s First Aid have updated their advice after research suggested that many parents did not know what action to take.

    The new advice is to place the baby face down along the thigh while an adult strikes the child’s back.

    First aid experts say this gives the baby more support compared with the previous advice, which was to place the baby along the adult’s arm.

    A survey of 1,000 parents of under-fives found 38% had seen their child choke.

    Half of the parents said they did not know the correct way to help their child or how to clear the obstruction.

    Nearly half said they avoided giving their child certain foods in case they choked.

    Clive James, training officer at St John Ambulance, said: ‘If an infant is choking then, in the first instance, they should be laid face down along your thigh and supported by your arm, give them five back blows between the shoulder blades with your heel of your hand.

    “Previously this was done along the arm but the leg is felt to be more secure and provide more support.

    “Check their mouth for any obstruction. If there is still a blockage then turn the infant onto their back and give up to five chest thrusts.

    “Use two fingers, push inwards and upwards against their breastbone.

    “If the obstruction does not clear after three cycles of back blows and chest thrusts, call for an ambulance and continue until help arrives.”

     

    Related Posts:

    Tags: choking, gagging, NHS, resus, St John Ambulance



    This entry was posted
    on Thursday, February 20th, 2014 at 3:14 pm and is filed under The Gagging Thing…, Updates.
    You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.

    You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.


    « What is BLW, anyway? And what is it not..?

    FACEBOOK DOWN! (Don’t worry…) »




    Source link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest WhatsApp
    Previous ArticleEasy Rice Pudding (with Cooked Rice)
    Next Article The Value of Patience – All My Children Daycare & Nursery School

    Related Posts

    Infant

    5 simple bottle-feeding tips | BabyCenter

    Infant

    Homemade Spiced Unsweetened Applesauce (20 Minutes)

    Infant

    40 of the Best Halloween Books for Kids

    Infant

    How painter’s tape could help your baby sleep better at night

    Infant

    Win the September Swag Box!

    Infant

    30 School Lunch Ideas That are Easy and Healthy

    Infant

    12 Amazon Items For Baby’s Transition to Solids

    Infant

    Infant Constipation: Causes, Signs, and Treatments

    Add A Comment

    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • YouTube
    • TikTok
    • WhatsApp
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    New Posts
    Infant

    Parenthood with the Pecks: Josh & Paige Peck Tell All

    Parenthood is a crazy beautiful ride. There are ups and downs that so many of…

    Cutest Preschool Bunny Craft w/ Printable Bunny Template

    Is It Time to Update Your Preschool Assessment Forms?

    Importance of Educating Children on the Environment

    Easy & Fun Irish Flag Craft for Kids

    Sunshine Childcare Center provides a safe, nurturing environment to give children a great start in life as well as a promising future

    CONTACT:

    214 Harrison Ave,
    Boston, MA, 02111

    Boston@sunshinebilingual.com

    617-426-3083

    Categories
    • Activities (17)
    • Child Care (100)
    • Features (116)
    • Infant (503)
    • Leadership (24)
    • Learning (48)
    • Parenting (21)
    • Preschool (15)
    • Skill (33)
    • Toddler Care (290)
    Most Popular
    Infant

    How Much Should a 2 Month Old Eat?

    Toddler Care

    Best Suction Bowl for Babies and Toddlers (Updated 2022)

    Toddler Care

    Favorite Zucchini Cake

    Toddler Care

    Homemade Hummus (Without Tahini) In 5 Minutes

    © 2023 Sunshine Billingual.
    • Blog
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.