After getting an AED, you should first find its two important buttons, one is the power on button and the other is the defibrillation button, after the power is on, the AED will guide you to complete the latter operation.
AED (automated external defibrillator), also known as a "life-saving device," is a simple device that can save patients from sudden cardiac arrest. When you get an AED, the first thing you need to do is to find its two important buttons, one is the power on button and the other is the defibrillation button.
After the AED is turned on, the AED will guide you through the later operations. Inside the AED are two electrode pads that are glued to the patient's chest, and each electrode pad has a drawing of where to affix the pads, so you don't have to worry about affixing them incorrectly. The electrode pads are disposable consumables, and many manufacturers' electrode pad cables need to be plugged into the AED's cable connector after powering on the device.
Car equipment
Cardiac and respiratory arrests are the most urgent cases of on-site resuscitation, pay more attention to CPR and AED, participate in more first-aid training, learn first aid knowledge, and seize the "golden 4 minutes". If CPR is performed correctly within 4 minutes, more than 50% of patients can be successfully resuscitated. If it takes more than 10 minutes without effective CPR, the patient's survival rate will be very slim.
The AED defibrillator is an emergency device that can be used to resuscitate patients with sudden cardiac arrest, and is divided into semi-automatic external defibrillators and fully automatic external defibrillators. It can diagnose specific cardiac arrhythmias and deliver an electric shock to defibrillate, and is a medical device that can be used by laypeople to resuscitate cardiac arrest patients.