Absolutely not. This all boils down to your primary survey or ABC's (Airway, Breathing, and Circulation). You started performing CPR on the child because they weren't breathing and probably didn't have circulation. When the child starts to breath again on their own, you have to stop what you're doing and re-assess the situation. If they were breathing when you first found them you would not have started CPR in the first place, and the same logic applies now. On another note, you cannot breath if your heart isn't beating, so don't drive yourself nuts deciding whether or not to continue compressions; the answer is no.
As you give the ventilation, look down the axis of the body and you should see the chest rise approximately 1/2 to 1 inch. This is how you will know air is going into the lungs.
Completely covering the mouth
the diaphragm under the lungs contracts and relaxes so that the air enters the lungs the breathing is takes place. so the lungs do not know when to breathe, it is the Brain which controls this system.
He goes there during the day.
The lungs remove nothing from the heart.
As you are giving the breath, you must see the chest rise 1/2 to 1 inch to know the breath is going into the lungs.
I do don't know! :( Can anyone help me?!
You would have to know where you were going.
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I know they have two lungs each the size of small cars.
If while recieving breaths during CPR their chest does not rise. That means the air is not able to reach their lungs.
i don't know if this is the answer but the lungs