That headline is usually used for life-threatening emergencies where seconds truly matter. Since you didn’t name a specific situation, here is clear, universal first-aid guidance that applies to the most critical scenarios until professional help arrives. 🚑
FIRST AID WHEN EVERY MINUTE COUNTS
1. Check Responsiveness
- Tap the person and shout
- If no response → act immediately
2. Call Emergency Services
- Call your local emergency number right away
- If others are present, tell one specific person to call
Never assume someone else already has.
🚨 MOST COMMON LIFE-THREATENING SITUATIONS
🫀 Cardiac Arrest
Signs:
- Not breathing or only gasping
- No pulse
- Unresponsive
What to do immediately:
- Start CPR
- Push hard and fast in the center of the chest
- 100–120 compressions per minute
- If an AED is available, use it
🧠 Stroke
FAST signs:
- Face drooping
- Arm weakness
- Speech difficulty
- Time to call emergency services
What to do:
- Call emergency services immediately
- Do not give food, drink, or medication
- Keep the person calm and seated
🩸 Severe Bleeding
What to do:
- Apply firm pressure with clean cloth or hands
- If bleeding continues:
- Apply a tourniquet above the wound (if trained)
- Do NOT remove embedded objects
😮 Choking
If the person can’t breathe or speak:
- Perform abdominal thrusts (Heimlich maneuver)
- Continue until object is expelled or they become unresponsive
- If unresponsive → start CPR
⚡ Severe Allergic Reaction (Anaphylaxis)
Signs:
- Swelling of face or throat
- Difficulty breathing
- Hives + dizziness
What to do:
- Use epinephrine (EpiPen) if available
- Call emergency services
- Lay person flat unless breathing is difficult
🔥 Loss of Consciousness
- Check breathing
- If breathing → place in recovery position
- If not breathing → start CPR
⚠️ CRITICAL DON’TS
- Don’t delay calling emergency services
- Don’t give food or drink to unconscious or stroke victims
- Don’t wait “to see if it passes”
THE MOST IMPORTANT RULE
If something feels serious, treat it as serious. Acting too early is safer than acting too late.
If you tell me which emergency this headline refers to (stroke, heart attack, choking, bleeding, collapse, etc.), I can give precise step-by-step first aid for that exact situation.