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No you can not use one adult and one child aed pad.
The answer is no. The way the Automated External Defibrillators (AED) are set up today you can only plug in one set of pads into the machine at a time; either the children pads or the adult pads.
Any adult AED pad, as long as it is compatible with the AED, will be OK.
Any adult pad that is recommended by the manufacturer of the AED will be acceptable to use.
Place pads upper right & lower left to ribs like an adult; if pads are too large, place on front & back. The pad icons will show where the pad is to be placed. See related link for pictures.
1 pad upper right on patients chest. 1 pad lower left side, on the ribs.
No, AED pads can not be cut.
If the child is a pediatric patient, an adult size AED pad may be used. This is only an option when child sizes are not available.
Place 1 pad on the chest and 1 on the back.
To use the AED, first turn it on. Place the pads on the patient. (and plug the pad leads into the AED if required). The AED should analyze at this point; now follow the instructions of the AED.
At least an inch (two finger-widthsis how I teach it) as the minimum.Generally (but not always) the implanted pacemaker is by the left collar-bonewhile the AED pad should be under the right one, so we could also say 18+ inches depending on the size of the person.
For AED pad placement, remember the saying "White upper right, red to the ribs". These are the locations on the patient; one pad goes on the upper right of the chest; the other pad goes on the lower left side of the abdomen, on the ribs. It used to be the pad leads were white and red which denotes the location based on the color of the leads. Now, all the pads have icons on them which show the pad location upper right and lower left. For a child, it may require the pads located on the front of the chest, and on the back due to the size of the chest vs. the size of the pads. See the related link for examples.