Infant CPR
Infant CPR is administered to any victim under the age of 12 months. Infants, just as children, have a much better chance of survival if CPR is performed immediately. If you are alone with the infant, do not dial 9-1-1 until after you have made an attempt to resuscitate the victim. Check the infant for responsiveness by patting his feet and gently tapping his chest or shoulders. If he does not react (stirring, crying, etc.), immediately check his airway
A for Airway
AIRWAY "A" is for AIRWAY. It is normal for an infant to take shallow and rapid breaths, so carefully look, listen and feel for breathing. If you cannot detect any signs of breathing, the tongue may be obstructing the infant's airway. Although the head tilt/chin lift technique is similar to adults and children, when clearing an infant's airway it's important not to tilt the head too far back. An infant's airway is extremely narrow and overextending the neck may actually close off the air passage
Tilt the head back into what is called the "sniffer's position" - far enough to make the infant look as if he is sniffing (Figure 1). If the victim is still not breathing on his own, you will have to assist him breathing
B for Breathing
BREATHING "B" is for BREATHING.
Cover the infant's mouth and nose with your mouth creating a seal, and give a quick, gentle puff from your cheeks. Let the victim exhale on his own - watch his chest and listen and feel for breathing. If he does not breathe on his own, again place your mouth over his mouth and nose and give another small puff (Figure 1). If the infant remains unresponsive (no crying or moving), immediately check his circulation
C for Circulation
CIRCULATION "C" is for CIRCULATION. An infant's pulse is checked at the brachial artery, which is located inside of the upper arm, between the elbow and the shoulder (Figure 1). Place two fingers on the brachial artery applying slight pressure for 3 to 5 seconds. If you do not feel a pulse within that time, then the infant's heart is not beating, and you will need to perform chest compressions
Compressions
COMPRESSIONS An infant's delicate ribcage is especially susceptible to damage if chest compressions are improperly performed, therefore it is important to use caution when rescuing an infant.
Place three fingers in the center of the infant's chest with the top finger on an imaginary line between the infant's nipples. Raise the top finger up and compress with the bottom two fingers (Figure ). The compression should be approximately ⅓ to ½ the depth of the infant's chest.
Count aloud as you perform 5 cycles of 30 compressions and 2 breaths before checking the infant for breathing and pulse. REMEMBER TO DIAL Ambulance.
If there is no pulse, continue administering 30 compressions/2 breaths until an ambulance arrives. If at any point the infant regains a pulse but still does not breathe on his own, give him one rescue breath every three seconds.
CPR Review and Summary
Infant CPR should be administered to any victim under the age of 12 months (except for newborns in the first hours after birth). The procedure is as follows:
1. Check for responsiveness by patting the infant's shoulders or chest. 2. Remember your A-B-C: - Airway: an infant's head should be tilted into the "sniffer position". Do not overextend an infant’s neck as this may close off the airway.
- Breathing: cover the infant's nose and mouth with your mouth and use gentle puffs, breathing from your cheeks, not your lungs.
- Circulation: check for pulse at the brachial artery, in the infant's inside upper arm. If there is none, perform five compressions - 2 fingers (approximately ½ the size of a hand), 1/3 to 1/2 the depth of the infant's chest.
3. Perform rescue efforts for 1 to 2 minutes before dialing 9-1-1. 4. Continue performing rescue efforts, checking for pulse every minute until help arrives.
Congragulations! You have done it!