This is a very broad question. You must first determine the injury, then you treat them for that injury. If it is severe, you would call 911.
Then you would most likely die or get injured rly bad. If you escaped then you are one lucky person!
When people have accidents in their automobile and someone is injured it is required to report it to the police and to their insurance company. This is because the injured person may need a doctors care and the person responsible for the accident is the one that will be required to pay through their insurance company.
Well I sort of depends on the type of person you are... I personally would feel a little bad to leave the already injured person to go to another one with more injuries even though it would be a good thing to do..... I would try to help both in any way I can if I could.
No one!
A lot of times the sibling will feel left out, not important, overlooked, and invisible in times like this. Theyll tend to get less attention than the injured one. One of the best things you can do is give the non-injured sibling a present. Even if its not a big present, it still shows the sibling that you care about them just as much as the injured person, and that you took time to think about them.
Depends on the distance between the shark and the injured person and also depends on the extension of the injury. I suppose that for a short distance it will take one minute for the shark to feel the presence of blood from the injured person
To help others and deal with patients on a one-on-one basis.
I think the phrase means that no one would really care or notice the person or thing. They "wouldn't look twice".
If you are speaking to one person, you would say "Cuídate." If you were speaking to more than one person at the same time, you would say "Cuídense." The first one is pronounced, "KWEE-dah-tay." The second one is pronounced, "KWEE-den-say."
Because if one person makes a mistake the other person will not have enough time to react to it, and they could be seriously injured.
Then people get injured feet
It is called a rescue drag or a drag and carry. You only do it under the circumstance where leaving an injured person in any area poses a greater threat of imminent danger than any possibly injuries you might aggravate and worsen if you moved that person. For example: A person has a broken neck. You normally would not move that person unless you could do so with great care and support his neck also. Usually requires a litter and more than one person. But lets say enemy tank fire is getting closer and closer to that injured person's position and you are running out of time and you are by yourself. You have to do what you can. Grab his uniform by the collar and drag him out of there as fast as you can anyway necessary.