What poison did you ingest; where is the container.
If you mean a first aider as in someone certified in 1st aid, assess the current situation (if I step in to administer 1st aid, am I putting myself in danger, creating 2 in need). Assess the victim. Is the victim conscious. If not, follow CPR guidelines. If they are conscious, ask them, or secondly a witness, what happened. Determine victims needs such as are they going into shock, having heat stroke, bleeding out, etc...
Your question is not clear. If you are speaking about a lead poisoning case you should ask your lawyer. You can add more details on the discussion page.Your question is not clear. If you are speaking about a lead poisoning case you should ask your lawyer. You can add more details on the discussion page.Your question is not clear. If you are speaking about a lead poisoning case you should ask your lawyer. You can add more details on the discussion page.Your question is not clear. If you are speaking about a lead poisoning case you should ask your lawyer. You can add more details on the discussion page.
It could be your conscious telling you that you should go ahead and ask the boy out already! You really should have the confidence to ask him out, you never know what could happen!
When Ensign Joyner examined the disabled victim, they should always ask for permission before proceeding to touch her or any of her belongings.
Conscious. An unconscious victim is assumed to want first aid assistance, since they are incapable of giving consent.Consent must be attained before a rescuer may touch a patient. Failure to do so can result in prosecution from the patient.Given consent - The adult, (18+), patient that is conscious can give consent directly but a parent or legal guardian must give consent for a conscious minor or a mentally handicapped patient.Implied consent - The unconscious patient can be helped without consent but a rescuer should ask / look for their next of kin first.
He was conscious that he would have to ask for help in order to complete the task.
When Ensign Joyner examined the disabled victim, they should always ask for permission before proceeding to touch her or any of her belongings.
ask them, telling them what you are doing, giving an explantion ,explantion the dr oreder
Ask questions, do not touch or move painful, injured areas of the body and get consent to give care.
you ask, 'do i look okay?'
It depends on how you view things and how bad your situation is. You should always ask what the victim wants to do instead of just making the decision for them.
You ask that about a nation that puts underweight women up as ideals when more than half the population is overweight. Surely you jest.