Get First Aid Ready
The Ultimate Guide to the DRSABCD Action Plan
26/06/2024- We’ve got a fresh new look to our ultimate guide and an FAQ. We hope you like it and find it easy to navigate.
At Accidental Health & Safety, our mission is to equip as many people as possible with the knowledge and confidence to administer first aid when it matters most. Our article goes beyond just providing a list of steps; we delve deep into the ‘why’ behind each action, using hypothetical scenarios and FAQs to debunk common misconceptions and clarify important concepts. We believe that understanding the DRSABCD action plan isn’t just about memorising a sequence – its about gaining the confidence and readiness to step up in an emergency situation.
Whether you’re a complete beginner or seeking to refresh your knowledge, we hope this guide will serve as a comprehensive resource for your first aid learning journey. Let’s work together to make our communities safer, one DRSABCD action plan at a time!”
DRSABCD
Get Confident
What is the DRSABCD action plan?
DRSABCD an acronym used in First Aid. In an emergency, remembering this acronym and the steps involved can help you provide basic life support. In fact, in our first aid courses this is the key thing we want you to remember after you leave! If you want to learn more about first aid for minor conditions, read more here.
Table Of Contents
Danger: many emergencies are made worse because safety is forgotten
What Happens: When confronted with an emergency, our adrenaline kicks in. Adrenaline is great! It can help us overcome our fears. However, It can also make us blind to the real dangers in emergencies. It can be easy to just rush in on instinct, without thinking.
Here are three scenarios where you’ll need to be careful
So let’s recap:
The first D in DRSABCD is danger. Always remember to take a deep breath and observe the surroundings. Try to make the scene safe. If it’s too unsafe to help, call an ambulance and monitor the situation. Make sure to keep those around safe.
Response
The next area in DRSABCD is response. In our day to day life we automatically check for response. For example, if one of your friends kicks their toe, what’s the first thing you say to them? are you ok mate?
What is involved in checking for response in an emergency? We have a great acronym to help: COWS. Cows stands for:
C- Can you hear me O- Open your eyes W- What’s your name S- Squeeze my hand
When someone is injured, trying these steps gives a great indication of whether they are responsive or not. If they don’t respond to your talk or touch, then it’s likely they are not responsive. Australian Resuscitation Council guidelines also recommend grasping and squeezing the persons shoulder to try to elicit a response as a last resort.
What happens next?
If you get a response what do you do next? It’s important to check for other injuries and determine what treatment is needed. After that, look for ways to help the patient be more comfortable. During the whole process, try to keep them engaged in conversation if possible. A person’s condition can rapidly change, so our conversation helps us to keep checking their responsiveness.
If you don’t get a response what’s next? Follow the rest of the steps in the DRSABCD action plan.
What classifies as responsive? If you go through the COWS acronym, and you get a minor response, like groaning without their eyes opening, would you say it counts as a response. No. It’s not enough for them to be classed as responsive. If that’s the case we treat them as an unresponsive person.
Want to learn a little more about checking for response? Check out our article What is Cows in CPR
Send for Help: It’s a race against time
When an emergency unfolds, seconds can morph into life-altering moments. It’s a race against time where the arrival of an ambulance isn’t just a relief, it’s a lifeline. The quicker help arrives, the better the chances for a critical patient to survive. It’s as if each tick of the clock can tip the scales between life and death. That’s why “S”, standing for “Send for Help”, plays such a crucial role in the DRSABCD action plan. Many First Aiders have gone 10, or even 15 minutes into a rescue before they’ve realised an ambulance wasn’t called
What questions may you have about sending for help in an emergency?
Common Send for Help Questions
Hot Tip: If you are the only person at the scene, why not put your phone on speaker when calling emergency services. That way you can be free to perform CPR.
Airways
In an emergency, people have died because no one forgot to check the airways. For example, people have died in a car crash because while unconscious the position with their head forward has obstructed their airways. That’s why in first aid, airways are a big priority!
What do you need to know about airways? It’s very common when someone has suffered a life threatening illness or injury that fluid, such as blood or vomit is in their airways. To check for this, you will need to open their mouth and look inside. What happens if you find fluid inside? You will need to roll them onto their side temporarily to drain the fluid.
How do you do it?
- Put the arm closest to you over the chest
- Put the other arm out straight
- Lift the knee
- Use the knee and shoulder as push points to roll the person to their side
- Allow the knee to hit the ground
- Grab their hand flatten it out and pull it into the body to keep the body from rolling face down
- Tilt their head back gently
- Scoop fluids out with your finger to speed up process
Airway Technique: The Chin Lift
If a person has no fluid, and are unconscious on their back, that presents another problem. When unconscious, the tongue is relaxed, and could block their airways. How can we help? We do what is called a chin lift:
The Australian Resuscitation council guidelines show how to do this:
One hand is placed on the forehead or the top of the head. The other hand is used to provide Chin Lift. The head (NOT the neck) is tilted backwards. It is important to avoid excessive force, especially where neck injury is suspected. When the person is on their side, the head will usually remain in this position when the rescuer’s hands are withdrawn.
Chin lift is commonly used in conjunction with Backward Head Tilt. The chin is held up by the rescuer’s thumb and fingers in order to open the mouth and pull the tongue and soft tissues away from the back of the throat. See ANZCOR Guideline 4 – January 2016 – Page 3
Breathing
Checking for Breathing is the next step of the DRSABCD action plan. Breathing determines what we do next. If someone isn’t breathing they need CPR quickly. How do you check for breathing? It’s by a simple test called the look listen and feel test. You’ll find this easier in the stress of an emergency rather than looking for a pulse.
Look: Place your hand on the patients chest. Look for the rise and fall of the chest.
Listen: Place your cheek near the patients mouth, you will be able to hear if they are breathing
Feel: With your cheek near the patients mouth, you will be able to feel air if they are breathing.
Using this test you should be able to find evidence of breathing within 10 seconds. If you have been checking for 10 seconds and haven’t found any signs, chances are they aren’t breathing. In that case, starting CPR will lead to a better outcome.
Breathing Vs Gasping: How it affects DRSABCD
When determining whether someone is breathing or not, something you likely may see is that the patient is gasping for air. This is what is known as agonal breathing. One study showed that this is common in 40% of cardiac arrest patients. Gasping is not true breathing, it is a reflex action. What does that mean for you? If an unconscious person is gasping, give them CPR. Don’t assume that gasping is breathing.
CPR
Put your palm in the centre of the chest, on the lower half of the sternum, slightly below the nipple line.
Using your body weight, push down. You should press down around 1/3 of a patients chest depth. That’s usually a little more than 5 cm on an adult. How fast and often should you push? The optimal rate for chest compressions is 100 to 120 compressions per minute which is about the same rate as songs like “Stayin Alive” by the Bee Gees or “Another One Bites The Dust” by Queen.
Common Mistakes
Compression’s not hard enough
One study showed that most people stop pushing hard enough after 1 minute and don’t realise.
Hands in wrong location
Putting your hand in the wrong location reduces the effectiveness of CPR and can damage internal organs
Too Slow or Too Fast
The optimal rate for compressions of 100-120 beats per minute makes a difference to effectiveness.
Rescue Breaths
Australian Resuscitation Council Guidelines recommend repeating this pattern: give 30 chest compressions followed by two rescue breaths. How do you give rescue breaths?
1. Take a breath
2. Open your mouth as widely as possible and place it over the person’s slightly open mouth
3. Pinch or seal their nostrils
4. Blow to inflate their lungs.
Each breath should take approximately a second. Be careful to check that their head is still tilted slightly backwards. You don’t want to have the airway blocked by the tongue when giving rescue breaths.
Avoid these common mistakes
Breathing too hard:
You want to see the persons chest rise and fall when giving rescue breaths. However if you breath too much, excess air leaves the lungs and enters the stomach which can induce vomiting.
Inadequate Air Seal:
Remember to pinch their nose. Otherwise all the air from the rescue breath will escape through the nostrils
Do Rescue Breaths Really Matter?
Some countries, such as the USA run “hands-only” CPR programs. Does that mean breaths don’t matter? No, they still matter. Australian guidelines recommend that those who are willing and able to should give rescue breaths. Rescue Breaths lead to better outcomes. In fact, countries where “hands-only” programs are run still recommend rescue breaths as best practice.
Is it safe to give rescue breaths?
The Australian Resuscitation Council Guidelines state: “The risk of disease transmission is very low and need not deter rescue breathing without a barrier device.” What can you do to make things safer? Many studies have advocated using a barrier device such as a face shield.
Defibrillators: They’re showing up everywhere for good reason. They make a difference.
How Defibrillators Work
How to use a Defibrillator
The Great Impact
We know that hospitals and ambulances have defibrillators, so why are we as first aiders being taught first aid? For good reason. In an emergency, the quicker someone receives defibrillation, the better the outcome.
One study of found that the survival rate for victims who received their defibrillation within the first 3 minutes was 74%. For those who received their first defibrillation after the first 3 min, the survival rate was only 49%. That’s a huge difference! Another study trained more than 19,000 community members in Defibrillator usage. Not only did early defibrillation save more lives, but it lead to more people surviving post defibrillation.
Why you need one.
Think about your home or work. How long will it take an ambulance to arrive? Would it come in three minutes or less? Likely not. Having a defibrillator at your workplace or in the home could save lives!
The Australian resuscitation council says that for every minute defibrillation is delayed, there is approximately 10% reduction in survival if the patient has suffered a sudden cardiac arrest. 33,000 people suffer a sudden cardiac arrest out of hospital each year. Less than 10% will survive. Early defibrillation could mean 70-80% survive. That could mean more than 20,000 lives saved each year
How to Use a Defibrillator
The first important step is to prepare the patient. Often a small preparation kit is kept with the defibrillator. It often includes scissors, a cpr faceshield, towlette, and shaving razor. You’ll need to have the patients chest exposed to apply the defibrillator pads. You could try removing their clothes, but that could take too much time. So using the scissors quickly cut their clothes off. If their chest is hairy it could mean that the defibrillator pads wont stick. In that case, use the shaving razor to shave where you will apply the pads. What is the point of the towlette? Water and electricity don’t mix. If you’ve pulled someone out of the water and need to defibrillate use the towlette to dry them. However, remember the emphasis on quick defibrillation. Prolonging the preparation period could result in a bad outcome.
Once the defibrillator is there, press the on button. The defibrillator will coach you through the process. It will tell you to apply the defibrillator pads remove them from the defibrillator and apply them to the patient. Place one pad slightly below the collar bone on the person’s right chest above the nipple and one pad on the person’s left side below the arm pit.
Next up, the defibrillator will tell you to step back while it analyses the patients heart rhythm. What does this mean? When a person has a cardiac arrest, the signal from the brain to the heart is interrupted causing the heart to “fibrillate” or we could say “quiver.” The defibrillator analyses to see if this is what the heart is doing before giving a shock.
If the heart is fibrillating, the defibrillator will then apply a shock. It may take multiple shocks before a person is revived. If the heart is not fibrillating, the defibrillator will say shock not advised and then tell you to continue giving CPR.
DRSABCD Defib Myth’s
Let’s bust some common Defib Myths.
Let’s Put it All Together
DRSABCD Complete Rescue
DRSABCD FAQ’s
Let’s Wrap it up
We hope this article has helped you get a good grounding in DRSABCD. There are quite a few steps in this action plan, but if we have each step stuck in our mind it will be a huge help in an emergency. We want to help you do this, so keep tuned in to our first aid guide and join one of our first aid courses.