direct pressure 1st method to stop bleeding wash your hands best way to prevent the spread of infection comminuted fracture bone is in 2 or more pieces pet dogs most animal bites figure 8 method bandage for an elbow or knee puncture wound narrow, deep wound septic shock shock caused by infection dislocation joint comes apart and stays apart dressing sterile material placed on an open wound "C" of CSM circulation high risk for rabies skunk, raccoon or bat heat exhaustion sweating, thirsty, flulike symptoms 2 minutes change CPR rescuers every hypovolemic shock shock caused by blood loss impaled object stabilize so it won't move 1 1/2 inches depth of infant chest compressions veins steady, slow bleeding, dark red wear gloves 1st step to treat an open wound heat stroke life threatening, skin red, no sweat superficial burn sunburn, pink/red burned clothing do not remove if stuck to skin greenstick fracture incomplete fracture bandage holds a dressing in place avulsion wound where a flap of skin is torn off but still attached implied consent consent if your patient is unresponsive artery spurting blood, bright red color scald burns from contact with hot liquids absorbed poison occurs from contact with the skin 30:2 ratio of compressions to breaths in CPR direct pressure 1st method to stop bleeding wash your hands best way to prevent the spread of infection comminuted fracture bone is in 2 or more pieces pet dogs most animal bites figure 8 method bandage for an elbow or knee puncture wound narrow, deep wound septic shock shock caused by infection dislocation joint comes apart and stays apart dressing sterile material placed on an open wound "C" of CSM circulation high risk for rabies skunk, raccoon or bat heat exhaustion sweating, thirsty, flulike symptoms 2 minutes change CPR rescuers every hypovolemic shock shock caused by blood loss impaled object stabilize so it won't move 1 1/2 inches depth of infant chest compressions veins steady, slow bleeding, dark red wear gloves 1st step to treat an open wound heat stroke life threatening, skin red, no sweat superficial burn sunburn, pink/red burned clothing do not remove if stuck to skin greenstick fracture incomplete fracture bandage holds a dressing in place avulsion wound where a flap of skin is torn off but still attached implied consent consent if your patient is unresponsive artery spurting blood, bright red color scald burns from contact with hot liquids absorbed poison occurs from contact with the skin 30:2 ratio of compressions to breaths in CPR
(Print) Use this randomly generated list as your call list when playing the game. There is no need to say the BINGO column name. Place some kind of mark (like an X, a checkmark, a dot, tally mark, etc) on each cell as you announce it, to keep track. You can also cut out each item, place them in a bag and pull words from the bag.
1st method to stop bleeding
direct pressure
best way to prevent the spread of infection
wash your hands
bone is in 2 or more pieces
comminuted fracture
most animal bites
pet dogs
bandage for an elbow or knee
figure 8 method
narrow, deep wound
puncture wound
shock caused by infection
septic shock
joint comes apart and stays apart
dislocation
sterile material placed on an open wound
dressing
circulation
"C" of CSM
skunk, raccoon or bat
high risk for rabies
sweating, thirsty, flulike symptoms
heat exhaustion
change CPR rescuers every
2 minutes
shock caused by blood loss
hypovolemic shock
stabilize so it won't move
impaled object
depth of infant chest compressions
1 1/2 inches
steady, slow bleeding, dark red
veins
1st step to treat an open wound
wear gloves
life threatening, skin red, no sweat
heat stroke
sunburn, pink/red
superficial burn
do not remove if stuck to skin
burned clothing
incomplete fracture
greenstick fracture
holds a dressing in place
bandage
wound where a flap of skin is torn off but still attached
avulsion
consent if your patient is unresponsive
implied consent
spurting blood, bright red color
artery
from contact with hot liquids
scald burns
occurs from contact with the skin
absorbed poison
ratio of compressions to breaths in CPR
30:2