Young children often want to put things into their mouth. This includes toys and food. And it can include anything they find nearby, such as a pen cap or coin. Small objects can choke a child. This happens when the object slips into the child’s airway (trachea). A blocked airway can be very serious, even deadly. Choking can block the flow of air and cut off oxygen to the brain. This can cause permanent brain damage or death.
This sheet can help you prepare for a choking emergency. It will also help you take steps to prevent a child from choking.
Any object small enough to enter a child's airway can block it. This includes:
The steps to take when a child is choking will vary. The instructions for each situation are below.
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Do NOT put your finger into the child’s mouth to remove the object. Your finger could push the object deeper into the child’s throat.
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Call 911. This is because the airway can become fully blocked.
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Encourage the child to cough until the object comes out. Don't do the Heimlich maneuver. The child's cough is better than the Heimlich maneuver.
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Watch the child closely to make sure the object comes out and doesn’t shift to fully block the throat.
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Do NOT put your finger into the child’s mouth to remove the object. Your finger could push the object deeper into the child’s throat.
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Tell someone nearby to call 911.
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Do abdominal thrusts. First, stand or kneel behind the child and wrap your arms around their waist.
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Make a fist with one hand. Place the thumb-side of your fist into the child's belly just above the bellybutton (navel).
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Use fast, short motions to thrust inward and upward. Don’t lift the child off the floor while doing this.
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Continue abdominal thrusts until the object comes out, the child can cough and breathe, the child becomes unconscious, or help arrives.
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Shout for help and call 911.
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Lay the child down on their back on a hard, flat surface such as a table, floor, or the ground.
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Start CPR. Use the heel of your hand to push down on the lower part of the child’s breast bone, just below the nipple line. Press down to at least 1/3 depth of the child's chest, or about 2 inches. You can use 2 hands if you need to. Do this 30 times really fast. This should take about 20 seconds. This is a rate of at least 100 to 120 compressions per minute.
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Look in the child's mouth for the object before you give 2 rescue breaths. Gently lift the child's chin up with one hand and tilt the head back. Place your mouth over their mouth, pinch the nose shut, and puff 2 breaths into the child's mouth. Each breath should last 1 second. Watch to see if the child's chest rises.
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If the chest does not rise, give 30 chest compressions. Look in the child's mouth for an object. Remove the object, being careful not to push it back into the throat. If you can't see an object, don't put your finger in the child's mouth.
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If the child does not start breathing, continue cycles of 30 chest compressions followed by 2 quick breaths. Do this until breathing starts, help arrives, you become too exhausted to continue, or the scene becomes unsafe.