EMERGENCY FIRST AID: Newborn Respiratory & Choking
Patient: Maggie (Newborn / NICU Grad)
High Risks: Aspiration (choking on milk), Respiratory Distress (Retractions), Apnea (Stopped breathing).
🛑 IMMEDIATE DANGER SIGNS (Call 911)
If you see ANY of these, call 911 immediately:
- Blue/Gray Skin: especially around the lips, tongue, or face (Cyanosis).
- Stopping Breathing: Pauses longer than 20 seconds, or shorter pauses accompanied by blue skin/limpness.
- Unresponsiveness: You cannot wake her, she is limp (like a rag doll), and does not react to pain/stimulation.
- Severe Retractions: The skin is sucking in deeply between her ribs or at her neck while she is resting (not eating), and she is grunting (making a rhythmic "ugh, ugh" noise).
SCENARIO A: Choking While Feeding
Context: Maggie is on paced feeding. If milk goes down the wrong pipe or she gets overwhelmed.
| Mild Gagging | True Choking |
|---|---|
| Signs: Red face, coughing, sputtering, crying. She is making noise. | Signs: Silent. Mouth open but no sound. Face turning blue/purple. Cannot cough or cry. |
| ACTION: 1. Stop Feeding. 2. Sit her upright. 3. Let her cough it out. 4. DO NOT hit her back (this can lodge liquid deeper). | ACTION: 1. Call 911 (put phone on speaker). 2. Start Back Blows immediately. |
🚑 Procedure: Infant Choking (Conscious)
Step 1: 5 Back Blows
- Hold Maggie face down on your forearm, supporting her jaw with your hand (do not cover her mouth/nose).
- Rest your forearm on your thigh for support. Her head must be lower than her chest.
- Use the heel of your hand to give 5 firm back blows between her shoulder blades.
Step 2: 5 Chest Thrusts
- If the obstruction doesn't clear, turn her over (face up) on your forearm.
- Support her head (still lower than her chest).
- Place 2 fingers in the center of her chest (just below the nipple line).
- Give 5 quick chest thrusts (pushing down about 1.5 inches).
Repeat: Alternate 5 Back Blows and 5 Chest Thrusts until she coughs/cries (airway clear) or becomes unconscious (start CPR).
SCENARIO B: Respiratory Distress (Retractions)
Context: Maggie has a history of "lung fatigue."
The "Working Too Hard" Check:
- Look at her ribs: Is the skin sucking in between them?
- Look at her neck: Is the hollow of her throat sinking in with every breath?
- Listen: Is she "Grunting"? (A rhythmic noise on the exhale).
| Severity | Action |
|---|---|
| Mild (During Feed) | Stop Feeding. Burp her. Hold her upright. Wait 5 mins. If it stops, resume slowly. |
| Moderate (Persists after Feed) | Stop Feeding. Undress her to see chest clearly. Check temp. If she is breathing fast (>60 breaths/min) for more than 10 mins, go to ER. |
| Severe (Blue / Grunting) | Call 911. Do not put her in a car seat (the angle can compress the airway further). Keep her flat or slightly elevated until help arrives. |
SCENARIO C: Infant CPR (Unresponsive)
Context: If she stops breathing and has no pulse.
- Check Responsiveness: Flick the bottom of her feet. Call her name.
- Call 911.
- Check Pulse: Place fingers on the inside of her upper arm (brachial artery). Check for no more than 10 seconds.
- Start Compressions:
- Place Maggie on a firm, flat surface.
- Place 2 fingers in the center of the chest (just below nipple line).
- Push down 1.5 inches deep.
- Rate: Fast (100-120 beats per minute). "Stayin' Alive" tempo.
- Ratio: 30 Compressions : 2 Puffs of air (cover her nose and mouth with your mouth).
- Note: If you are alone, do 2 minutes of CPR before leaving to call 911.
🏥 When to go to the ER (Non-Life Threatening but Urgent)
- Fever: Rectal temperature > 100.4°F (38°C). Do not give Tylenol before going; they need to see the fever.
- Dehydration: Fewer than 3 wet diapers in 24 hours (or dry for 10+ hours).
- Vomiting: Projectile vomiting (shoots across room) or Green/Bright Yellow vomit (bile).