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- Legal Issues Surrounding First Aid
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- First aid is the initial care given to a sick or injured person before more formal medical
- assistance is applied. The goal of first aid is to intervene actively to prevent further
- damage, to provide life support, and to begin effective treatment of the victim's
- condition, to minimize injury and prevent death. Although first aid is not a substitute for
- medical care, those trained in first aid are able to assess the nature and the extent of an
- emergency and determine the best course of action to take until professional medical
- help arrives.
- The need for training in first aid is evident, considering that injury is the fourth leading
- cause of death. Falls are the most common cause of injury, but motor vehicle accidents
- are the most lethal, accounting for 22 percent of injury deaths.
- An important thing to know when dealing with a first aid situation is to be up to date as
- far as procedures are concerned. Procedures like slapping a choking person on the back,
- putting iodine on a wound, cutting an X on a snake bite, putting ointment on burns, or
- using a tourniquet to stop bleeding are old, out dated procedures and have been replaced
- by new ones from the Red Cross association. If you decide to administer first aid, be sure
- you are familiar with current procedures.
- First aid begins with a scene survey. Before approaching a victim, a survey of the area
- is necessary to determine if conditions surrounding the incident may place the victim and
- the rescuer in danger. Next, the primary survey will determine if lifesaving procedures
- must be immediately performed to save the victim's life. The primary survey involves
- checking the ABC's: A: Is the airway opened and the victim's neck stabilized? B: Is the
- patient breathing? C: Is the victim's blood circulating? Is there a pulse? Or is there
- active bleeding?
- Lifesaving procedures include cardiopulmonary resuscitation , which may be needed to
- provide basic life support when a victim has no pulse and is not breathing. The Heimlich
- maneuver aids choking victims by forcing ejection of obstructing material from the
- windpipe. The severity of spinal cord injuries has decreased 30-45 percent due to
- awareness that the neck must be stabilized before moving the accident victim. External
- bleeding is controlled by direct pressure and elevation of the bleeding site.
- The secondary survey is a total body examination, a pulse check, respiration count, and
- observation of skin conditions. The only outward sign of severe medical problems, such
- as cardiac diseases, stroke, or internal bleeding, may be shock. Those in shock will have
- pale, cool, and clammy skin, a rapid and weak pulse, more than 20 respirations per
- minute, weakness, and confused behavior. Treatment involves minimizing body heat
- loss, elevating the legs without disturbing the rest of the body, and getting help as quickly
- as possible.
- No one is required to render first aid under normal circumstances. Even a physician
- could ignore a stranger suffering a heart attack if he chose to do so. Exceptions include
- situations where a person's employment designates the rendering of first aid as a part of
- described job duties. Examples include lifeguards, law enforcement officers, park
- rangers and safety officers in industry. A duty to provide first aid also exists where an
- individual has presumed responsibility for another person's safety, as in the case of a
- parent-child or a driver-passenger relationship. While in most cases there is no legal
- responsibility to provide first aid care to another person, there is a very clear
- responsibility to continue care once you start. You cannot start first aid and then stop
- unless the victim no longer needs your attention, other first aiders take over the
- responsibility from you or you are physically unable to continue care.
- In every instance where first aid is to be provided, the victim's consent is required. It
- should be obtained from every conscious, mentally-competent adult. The consent may be
- either oral or written. Permission to render first aid to an unconscious victim is implied
- and a first aider should not hesitate to treat an unconscious victim. Consent of a parent
- or guardian is required to treat a child, however emergency first aid necessary to maintain
- life may be provided without such consent.
- Some well-meaning people hesitate to perform first aid because they are concerned
- about being sued. Legislators in almost every state in the country have passed Good
- Samaritan Laws which are intended to protect good people who offer first aid help to
- others. Most of the Good Samaritan Acts are very similar in their content and usually
- provide two basic requirements which must be met in order for the first aider to be
- protected by their provisions: the first aider must not deliberately cause harm to the
- victim and the first aider must provide the level and type of care expected of a reasonable
- person with the same amount of training and in similar circumstances.
- If there is a situation that is due to the defendant's own negligence, then it imposes on
- him a duty to make a reasonable effort to give assistance. In most states there is a statute
- to this effect in reference to automobile accidents. It states that the driver of a vehicle
- involved in an accident resulting in injury to or death of any person shall render to any
- person injured in such an accident reasonable assistance, including the carrying or
- making arrangements for the carrying of such person to a physician, surgeon, or hospital
- for medical or surgical treatment, if it is apparent that such treatment is necessary, and if
- such carrying is requested by the injured party. In most state Drivers' manuals directions
- are given for behavior required after an accident among them being a part devoted to care
- of persons injured in an accident. The directions specify that the injured person is not to
- be moved unless necessary, keep the victim lying down, still, and warm, and send for an
- ambulance, doctor, and police.
- So we see that for an omission to act there is no liability unless there is some definite
- relation between the parties which is regarded as imposing a duty to act. The law has not
- recognized any general duty to aid a person who is in peril, but if the defendant enters
- upon an affirmative course of conduct affecting the interests of another, he is regarded as
- assuming a duty to act and will thereafter be liable for negligent acts or omissions. It is
- quite clear then, that we are not required by law to give aid to a person in danger or
- injured except under conditions of the statute stated above, but if we do take it upon
- ourselves to help the injured then we must give reasonable care or we may find ourselves
- liable for our actions. However, it would appear to me that it would be very hard for a
- court to define what is or isn't reasonable care, and the outcome of any such case would
- quite likely be in favor of the defendant.
- The purpose of this paper is to provide some basic guidelines as to what the laws state
- in some approaches in first aid situations. With these guidelines it is hoped you can
- more readily see and appreciate probable legal implications and also that you will
- discover that the law is not engaged in searching for legal wrongdoing. Specific rules of
- conduct for your own work should be formulated after proper consultation with your own
- legal counsel.
- The law recognizes that there are various degrees of skill. There are few problems for
- people who stay in their own area. The right and duty to engage in radical procedures,
- such as external heart massage and tracheotomies, are necessarily governed by the
- circumstances. When communication is good and transportation swift, it is generally
- wise to leave such procedures to physicians. The function of para-medical people is to
- get the patient to a physician for diagnosis and treatment in as good condition as possible,
- not to act as a physician. In times of great disaster or in the absence of transportation and
- communication, it may be necessary and appropriate for all medical personnel to be
- upgraded. Such promotions must be made with caution and after careful consideration of
- the genuine need.
- It is not the purpose of the law nor this discussion to alarm you that you do not perform
- your duty. Legal complications have been extremely rare in this area and they will
- continue to be most unusual so long as common sense and advance planning and thought
- are applied. Your participation in first aid is evidence of your desire to achieve the
- proper level of skill and training. The careful use of this skill and training will not only
- enhance the physical welfare of the persons you care for but will also enhance your own
- legal welfare.
- On a closing note, here is a copy of Indiana's Good Samaritan Law as an example of
- almost every other states Good Samaritan Law.
- "From and after the effective date of this act, no civil action can be brought against a
- person licensed to practice the healing arts in the state of Indiana, who has gratuitously
- rendered first aid or emergency care at the scene of an accident, casualty or disaster to a
- person injured therein, for the recovery of civil damages as a result of any act or omission
- by the said person rendering such first aid or emergency care in the rendering of such
- first aid or emergency care. This immunity does not apply to acts or omissions
- constituting gross negligence or willful or wanton misconduct."
- As you can see, there is essentially nothing to lose if you administer first aid as long as
- you try your best to help and know what you are doing. Keep in mind that helping
- someone in a life and death matter is a very big commitment, so make sure you are
- willing to do so before you act.
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