The person touching the victim will also receive an electric shock (not as powerful as the victim but a shock none the less).
You would be shocked as well as the patient.
The AED could pick up the heart rhythm of the person touching the victim and not shock when a shock is required.
If you touch the victim while an AED is delivering a shock, you too will receive a shock.
You get shocked, too.
Do not touch the child before analyzing the heart rhythm so the AED will not pick up your heart rhythm. Do not touch the child before delivering a shock so you will not be shocked.
Nobody can safely touch the injured person during shock delivery. If anyone does, the shock will be transmitted to that person.
No one!
After the person has gone out of shock or you know it isn't no longer striking him.
Because the AED may pick up the persons rhythm who is touching the patient and not shock when a shock is required.
As long as the person who received the electric shock is NOT connected to the electric supply that caused the incident and you are not in a situation where you are at rise of injurty by the electric or any other situation then you can contune to provide first response help.
There are two answers of it. When negative ions and positive ions met each other we can get shock also by a non electrical substance or if a body temperatures of a person is low and our is high by imbalance of temperatures also we can get shock
shock