 
Heimlich Maneuver
In 1974, Dr. Henry J. Heimlich, a Cincinnati chest surgeon,
developed the Heimlich Maneuver -- a simple procedure that laymen can
use to save victims of choking, which is the sixth leading cause of accidental death. It
costs nothing, requires no special equipment, and takes just minutes to learn.
In addition to saving victims of choking, it is sometimes used to save drowning
victims.
The Heimlich Institute, which he founded in Cincinnati, is currently researching new treatments for AIDS
and cancer. It is also working to promote peaceful solutions to international problems
through the "A Caring World" program.
The Heimlich Maneuver has had an enormous
public health impact, saving an estimated 30,000 lives over the years in the
United States alone. In 1984, it earned Dr. Heimlich a prestigious
Albert Lasker
Award for Public Service. Many recipients of the Lasker Award have gone on
to win a Nobel Prize.
More than 100,000 people around the world choke
to death each year when food or other foreign objects accidentally lodge in the
trachea or windpipe. Unless breathing is restored within 4 minutes they face
irreversible brain damage and death. Bystanders may not recognize the problem
because the victim can’t speak and call for help. Many choking cases are
mistaken for heart attacks. Choking cases that occur in public eating
places are sometimes termed "café coronaries."
In 1972, Dr. Heimlich recognized the enormous
toll from accidental choking, and began to study exactly how objects lodge in
the windpipe and how they might be dislodged. He discovered that the usual ways
of treating the emergency actually made things worse. Hitting a choking victim
on the back or attempting to remove the object with the fingers usually wedged
it tighter in the windpipe. Dr. Heimlich realized that air remains in the lungs
even when a person's airway is completely blocked.
Research on animals convinced him that the
trapped air could be used to force an object out of the windpipe. He published
the idea in the Journal of Emergency Medicine so that physicians around the
world could read about it and test it. The idea was simple: Any bystander could
suddenly compress this air in the victim's lungs by delivering a quick, upward
thrust to the diaphragm. That would pop the object out of the windpipe, just
like squeezing on a water-filled balloon squirts water out the opening. The
report created a sensation, as people used it to save lives. First-aid
personnel, emergency medical technicians, medical professionals, and people in
everyday life use the Heimlich Maneuver in choking and other medical
emergencies.
Dr. Heimlich also has pioneered other medical
advances. In the 1950s, he developed and used an operation to replace the
esophagus, which carries food from the mouth to the stomach. Sometimes regarded
as the first total organ replacement in history, it is used today to repair
certain birth defects of the esophagus. In 1964, he developed a valve device for
draining blood and air out of the chest cavity in patients with gunshot
injuries. It was first used in the Vietnam War, cost about $1, and saved the lives of
thousands of American and Vietnamese soldiers shot in the chest. Today more than 250,000 Heimlich
valves are used worldwide each year to treat patients with chest wounds, or
following surgery.
Saving A Life With the
Heimlich Maneuver
A choking victim cannot speak or
breathe and needs help immediately. To perform the Heimlich maneuver on a
conscious adult, stand behind the victim and wrap your arms around his waist.
The rescuer makes a fist with one hand and places the other hand on top,
positioned below the rib cage and above the waist. The rescuer then applies
pressure by a series of upward and inward thrusts to force the foreign object
back up the victim's trachea. It can be used to save an adult choking victim, an
infant, drowning victims and in other situations. For simple instructions,
click here. For a course on First
Aid including use of the Heimlich Maneuver for the choking adult, child, or
infant, contact the
American Red Cross or
the American Heart Association.
When to Use the
Heimlich Maneuver
- The person cannot speak or cry out.
- The person's face turns blue from lack of
oxygen.
- The person desperately grabs at his or her
throat.
- The person has a weak cough, and labored
breathing produces a high-pitched noise.
- The person does all of the above, then
becomes unconscious.
Some people may use a gesture recommended as the universal warning sign for
choking. It involves placing a hand at the base of the neck.
The Heimlich Maneuver
for Pets?
Yes, indeed. The Heimlich Maneuver can save the life of a beloved dog or cat, if
owners know when and how to use it.
Click here for more
information.

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