Could You Pass a Roadside First Aid Test?
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Question 1
What Should You Do First At Any Accident Scene?
Question 1
What Does CPR Stand For?
Question 1
Which Position Helps An Unconscious Breathing Person Stay Safe?
Question 1
What Is The Correct Emergency Number In The United States?
Question 1
How Do You Stop Severe Bleeding From A Wound?
Question 1
What Should You Never Do With A Broken Bone?
Question 1
What Is A Tourniquet Used For On A Roadside?
Question 1
What Is The Sign Of A Possible Spinal Injury After A Crash?
Question 1
What Common Kitchen Item Can Soothe A Minor Burn?
Question 1
What Should You Do After Helping At An Accident Scene?
Question 1
What Is The First Thing To Do For A Choking Adult?
Question 1
What Does A Person's Pale And Clammy Skin Signal?
Question 1
Which Burn Should You Never Put Butter On?
Question 1
What Is The Safest Way To Move A Crash Victim?
Question 1
What Does An Unresponsive Person With No Breathing Need?
Question 1
What Should You Do If Someone Is Having A Seizure?
Question 1
What Is The Correct Compression Depth For Adult CPR?
Question 1
What Should You Do For A Person In Shock?
Question 1
What Color Should Healthy Gums Look In A First Aid Check?
Question 1
What Should You Do If Someone Faints Suddenly?
Question 1
What Is The Universal Sign That Someone Is Choking?
Question 1
Which Item In Your Car Can Substitute As A Sling?
Question 1
What Does A Bluish Tint To Someone's Lips Signal?
Question 1
How Should You Treat A Suspected Broken Arm Roadside?
Question 1
What Is The Correct Rate For Chest Compressions In CPR?
Question 1
What Should You Do For A Deep Puncture Wound?
Question 1
What Is The Best Position For Someone Who Is Vomiting?
Question 1
What Common Roadside Item Makes A Good Wound Dressing?
Question 1
What Should You Never Give An Injured Person At A Crash Scene?
Question 1
What Should You Do If Someone Has A Nosebleed?
Question 1
What Is The Heimlich Maneuver Used For?
Question 1
Which Side Should A Pregnant Crash Victim Lie On?
Question 1
What Does RICE Stand For In Injury First Aid?
Question 1
How Long Should You Rinse A Chemical Eye Splash?
Question 1
What Is The Safest Way To Remove A Splinter?
Question 1
What Should You Do For A Suspected Heat Stroke Victim?
Question 1
What Is The Purpose Of An Epipen At A Crash Scene?
Question 1
Where Should You Press To Check Someone's Pulse Quickly?
Question 1
What Should You Do If Someone Swallows A Poison?
Question 1
What Should You Do If Someone Is Stung By A Bee?
Question 1
What Does A Diabetic Person Need If They Feel Shaky And Confused?
Question 1
What Is The Purpose Of Elevating An Injured Leg?
Question 1
What Should You Do If Someone Gets Something In Their Eye?
Question 1
Which Symptom Is A Classic Warning Sign Of A Heart Attack?
Question 1
What Should You Do For A Child With A Febrile Seizure?
Question 1
What Is The Best First Step For A Sprained Ankle?
Question 1
What Should You Do If Someone Is Hyperventilating?
Question 1
What Is The First Thing To Do For A Severe Allergic Reaction?
Question 1
What Should You Do If Someone Is Having A Heart Attack?
Question 1
What Is The Safest Way To Help A Burn Victim?
Question 1
What Does A Sudden Severe Headache With Stiff Neck Suggest?
Question 1
What Is The Correct Way To Use A Triangular Bandage?
Question 1
What Should You Do If Someone Collapses In The Heat?
Question 1
What Is The Purpose Of Tilting Someone's Head Back In First Aid?
Question 1
What Should You Do If A Child Swallows A Small Battery?
Question 1
What Is The Correct First Aid For A Suspected Broken Nose?
Question 1
What Does A Person Need If They Feel Faint In Hot Weather?
Question 1
What Is The Safest Thing To Do For A Suspected Concussion?
Question 1
What Should You Do If Someone Has A Severe Nosebleed That Won't Stop?
Question 1
What Is The Safest Way To Handle A Knocked-Out Adult Tooth?
Question 1
What Does Skin That Feels Hot And Dry Signal In Hot Weather?
Question 1
What Is The Correct Way To Treat A Suspected Dislocated Shoulder?
Question 1
What Should You Place Under The Knees Of Someone In Shock?
Question 1
What Is The First Thing To Do For A Deep Cut That Won't Stop Bleeding?
Question 1
What Should You Do If Someone Has An Object Stuck In A Wound?
Question 1
What Is A Key Warning Sign Of An Allergic Reaction Beyond Hives?
Question 1
What Is The Easiest Way To Tell If A Burn Needs Emergency Care?
Question 1
What Should You Do If Someone Is Bleeding From The Ear After A Crash?
Question 1
What Is The Safest Way To Help Someone Having An Asthma Attack?
Question 1
What Does An Unequal Or Dilated Pupil Signal After A Head Injury?
Question 1
What Is The First Thing To Do For A Snake Bite Roadside?
Question 1
What Should You Do If Someone's Clothing Catches Fire?
Question 1
What Is A Key Sign That A Wound Needs Stitches?
Question 1
What Should You Do For Someone With A Suspected Broken Rib?
Question 1
What Should You Do If A Child Swallows A Sharp Object Like A Pin?
Question 1
What Is The Correct Way To Treat Frostbite On The Fingers?
Question 1
What Should You Do If Someone Has A Diabetic Emergency?
Question 1
What Is The Safest Way To Help Someone Who Has Fainted?
Question 1
Which Symptom Suggests Someone May Be Having A Stroke?
Question 1
What Should You Do If Someone Has A Panic Attack?
Question 1
What Does A Victim's Rapid Weak Pulse Most Likely Indicate?
Question 1
What Should You Do If Someone Breaks A Tooth In An Accident?
Question 1
What Should You Do For A Child Who Has Swallowed A Coin?
Question 1
What Should You Do If Someone Gets A Fish Hook Stuck In Skin?
1
Move The Victim
2
Check For Danger
3
Call For Help
4
Start CPR
Safety first — rescuers who rush in without checking become victims themselves, doubling the emergency.
1
Cardiac Pressure Response
2
Critical Patient Revival
3
Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation
4
Chest Pulse Restoration
CPR was standardized in 1960 by Dr. Peter Safar and has since saved millions of lives worldwide.
1
Flat On Back
2
Sitting Upright
3
Recovery Position
4
Legs Elevated
The recovery position tilts the airway open and lets fluids drain, preventing choking while help arrives.
1
411
2
911
3
999
4
112
The U.S. adopted 911 as its universal emergency number in 1968, inspired by the U.K.'s earlier 999 system.
1
Elevate And Wait
2
Apply Ice Directly
3
Rinse With Water
4
Apply Firm Pressure
Continuous firm pressure for at least 10 minutes allows blood to clot and can prevent life-threatening blood loss.
1
Immobilize The Limb
2
Force It Straight
3
Call For Help
4
Apply A Cold Pack
Forcing a broken bone can tear nearby blood vessels and nerves, turning a fracture into a life-threatening injury.
1
Stopping Limb Bleeding
2
Splinting A Fracture
3
Covering A Burn
4
Supporting A Sprain
Civil War surgeons popularized tourniquets, and modern military research confirmed they save lives when applied within minutes.
1
Swollen Ankle
2
Bleeding From Arm
3
Neck Or Back Pain
4
Bruised Knee
Never move someone with suspected spinal injury — improper movement can cause permanent paralysis even if they walked away initially.
1
Toothpaste
2
Ice Cubes
3
Butter Or Oil
4
Cool Running Water
Cool running water for 20 minutes is the gold standard — butter and ice actually trap heat and worsen burns.
1
Give Them Food
2
Leave Immediately
3
Drive The Victim
4
Wait For Paramedics
Leaving before paramedics arrive can deprive responders of critical eyewitness details about how the crash happened.
1
Give Them Water
2
Give Back Blows
3
Reach Into Throat
4
Lay Them Down
Five firm back blows between the shoulder blades can dislodge an object before moving on to abdominal thrusts.
1
A Mild Headache
2
Overheating
3
A Broken Bone
4
Possible Shock
Shock occurs when blood pressure drops dangerously low, and the body redirects blood away from the skin to protect vital organs.
1
Only Electrical Burns
2
Any Burn At All
3
Only Sunburns
4
Only Chemical Burns
Butter and oils trap heat inside the wound and dramatically increase the risk of infection — a dangerous old folk remedy.
1
Drag Them To Safety
2
Do Not Move Them
3
Roll Them On Their Side
4
Lift Under Their Arms
Moving a crash victim can turn a partial spinal injury into permanent paralysis — trained paramedics use special boards to keep the spine aligned.
1
A Cold Compress
2
A Warm Blanket
3
Elevating Their Legs
4
Chest Compressions
Starting chest compressions within two minutes of cardiac arrest can triple a person's chance of survival before paramedics arrive.
1
Put Something In Their Mouth
2
Give Them Water
3
Clear Space Around Them
4
Hold Them Still
The old advice to hold a seizure victim's tongue is a myth — people cannot swallow their tongues, and restraining them causes injuries.
1
Two Inches Deep
2
Four Inches Deep
3
One Inch Deep
4
Half An Inch Deep
Compressions shallower than two inches on an adult rarely circulate enough blood — rescuers are often surprised how firm the pressure needs to be.
1
Keep Them Warm And Still
2
Give Them A Drink
3
Ask Them To Walk Around
4
Apply Ice To Their Chest
Keeping a shock victim warm preserves body heat the body can no longer regulate on its own while blood pressure remains dangerously low.
1
White Or Gray
2
Dark Red
3
Pale Yellow
4
Pink
Paramedics check gum color because it reveals circulation instantly — white or blue gums signal that the body is not getting enough oxygen-rich blood.
1
Give Them Water
2
Shake Them Awake
3
Sit Them Up
4
Lay Them Flat
Laying a fainted person flat helps blood flow back to the brain, which is the actual cause of fainting.
1
Clutching Their Chest
2
Pointing At Mouth
3
Hands On Throat
4
Waving Both Arms
The American Red Cross established the hands-to-throat gesture as the universal choking signal in the 1970s.
1
A Scarf Or Jacket
2
A Floor Mat
3
A Seat Belt Cover
4
A Visor Mirror
Improvised slings from clothing have been used in battlefield medicine since the American Civil War to immobilize arm injuries.
1
Low Blood Sugar
2
Lack Of Oxygen
3
A Head Injury
4
Extreme Dehydration
Bluish lips, called cyanosis, appear when blood oxygen drops and is one of the clearest visible distress signals paramedics look for.
1
Bend It Gently Back
2
Elevate Above The Head
3
Immobilize And Support It
4
Wrap It Tightly Closed
Splinting a broken limb without moving it prevents bone fragments from damaging nearby nerves and blood vessels before help arrives.
1
100 To 120 Per Minute
2
60 To 80 Per Minute
3
140 To 160 Per Minute
4
40 To 60 Per Minute
The song 'Stayin' Alive' by the Bee Gees hits almost exactly 100 beats per minute and is officially recommended by the American Heart Association as a CPR rhythm guide.
1
Rinse With Hot Water
2
Squeeze Out The Blood
3
Cover And Keep Still
4
Pull The Object Out
Removing an embedded object can trigger rapid blood loss — paramedics are trained to stabilize the object in place until surgery.
1
On Their Side
2
Face Down Flat
3
Sitting Straight Up
4
Flat On Their Back
Turning a vomiting person onto their side prevents aspiration, which means accidentally inhaling vomit into the lungs — a leading cause of preventable death.
1
A Rubber Band
2
A Clean Cloth Or Shirt
3
A Paper Towel
4
A Plastic Bag
Military field medics have used torn clothing as wound dressings for centuries — the key is firm, clean pressure, not the material itself.
1
A Warm Blanket
2
Food Or Drink
3
Gentle Reassurance
4
Fresh Air
Giving food or drink before surgery can cause a dangerous condition called aspiration pneumonia — emergency rooms always ask 'when did you last eat?' for this reason.
1
Apply Ice Directly
2
Tilt The Head Back
3
Pinch And Lean Forward
4
Pack It With Tissue
Leaning back is a common myth — it sends blood down the throat, which can cause nausea or choking.
1
Treating A Broken Bone
2
Stopping Heavy Bleeding
3
Restarting The Heart
4
Clearing A Blocked Airway
Dr. Henry Heimlich introduced this technique in 1974, and it has since saved tens of thousands of lives worldwide.
1
Sitting Upright
2
Left Side
3
Right Side
4
Flat On Back
Lying on the left side keeps weight off the major vein carrying blood back to the mother's heart, protecting both her and the baby.
1
Rest, Inspect, Clean, Elevate
2
Rest, Ice, Clean, Examine
3
Rest, Ice, Compress, Elevate
4
Rinse, Ice, Cover, Elevate
Sports trainers developed the RICE method in the 1970s and it remains the go-to treatment for sprains and strains today.
1
Just Until It Stops Stinging
2
Around 2 Minutes
3
About 30 Seconds
4
At Least 15 Minutes
Emergency eye wash stations in workplaces are required by OSHA specifically because 15 minutes of flushing dramatically reduces permanent damage.
1
Squeeze The Skin Hard
2
Leave It And Wait
3
Pull With Your Fingernails
4
Sterilized Tweezers Or Needle
Sterilizing the tool with rubbing alcohol or a flame kills bacteria that could cause infection once the skin is broken.
1
Cool Them Down Immediately
2
Give Them Hot Tea
3
Cover Them With A Blanket
4
Have Them Walk It Off
Heat stroke can push body temperature above 104°F — the brain begins to sustain damage within minutes without rapid cooling.
1
Controlling A Seizure
2
Relieving Severe Chest Pain
3
Treating Severe Allergic Reaction
4
Reducing Heavy Bleeding
An EpiPen delivers epinephrine, which reverses dangerous swelling of the airway during anaphylaxis — often within minutes of injection.
1
Side Of The Neck
2
Top Of The Foot
3
Center Of The Chest
4
Back Of The Knee
The carotid artery in the neck carries such a strong pulse that paramedics use it even when a wrist pulse is too faint to detect.
1
Have Them Lie Flat Down
2
Call Poison Control Immediately
3
Give Them Milk To Drink
4
Make Them Vomit Right Away
Inducing vomiting after poisoning was standard advice for decades, but doctors reversed that guidance in 2003 because it can cause more harm with certain substances.
1
Squeeze It Out
2
Scrape Out The Stinger
3
Pop The Swelling
4
Apply Ice Directly
Squeezing a bee stinger pumps more venom in — scraping sideways with a card removes it safely.
1
Pain Reliever
2
Salty Crackers
3
A Glass Of Water
4
Sugar Or Sweet Drink
Low blood sugar — hypoglycemia — causes shakiness and confusion, and a fast-acting sugar source reverses it quickly.
1
Ease Breathing
2
Prevent Infection
3
Reduce Swelling
4
Warm The Limb
Raising a limb above heart level uses gravity to slow fluid buildup and reduce painful inflammation.
1
Rinse With Clean Water
2
Cover With A Bandage
3
Rub The Eye Gently
4
Blow Into The Eye
Rubbing can scratch the cornea — flushing with clean water floats debris out safely without causing damage.
1
Ringing In The Ears
2
Blurred Vision Only
3
Pain Down The Left Arm
4
Sudden Hiccups
Left arm pain occurs because heart attack nerve signals travel the same spinal pathway as the arm's nerves.
1
Splash Cold Water On Them
2
Put Something In Their Mouth
3
Keep Them Safe And Calm
4
Hold Them Down Firmly
Febrile seizures in children are triggered by rapid fever spikes and almost always stop on their own within minutes.
1
Walk It Off Slowly
2
Rest And Ice It
3
Soak In Hot Water
4
Wrap It Tightly Right Away
Heat in the first 48 hours increases swelling — ice and rest slow inflammation so healing can begin.
1
Give Them Cold Water
2
Loosen Their Clothing
3
Encourage Slow Deep Breaths
4
Have Them Lie Flat
Hyperventilating expels too much carbon dioxide — slowing the breath restores the blood's natural CO2 balance quickly.
1
Use An Epinephrine Injector
2
Apply A Cold Compress
3
Give An Antihistamine Tablet
4
Have Them Drink Water
Epinephrine — sold as an EpiPen — works within minutes to reverse airway swelling that antihistamines are far too slow to stop.
1
Let Them Walk It Off
2
Give Them Water
3
Apply Ice To Chest
4
Call 911 Immediately
Every minute matters during a heart attack — brain damage begins within four minutes without oxygen-rich blood.
1
Pop Any Blisters
2
Apply Toothpaste
3
Wrap It Tightly
4
Remove Clothing Near Burn
Removing clothing near a burn prevents fabric from sticking as the wound swells, reducing further tissue damage.
1
Muscle Tension
2
Low Blood Pressure
3
Possible Meningitis
4
Mild Dehydration
A sudden thunderclap headache with neck stiffness is a red-flag combination doctors treat as an emergency until proven otherwise.
1
As An Arm Sling
2
To Splint A Finger
3
To Cover The Eyes
4
As A Tourniquet
Triangular bandages were introduced in military field kits in the 1800s and remain standard first aid equipment worldwide today.
1
Keep Them Standing Up
2
Move Them To Shade
3
Cover Them With A Blanket
4
Give Them Hot Tea
Heat stroke can raise body temperature above 104°F within minutes — shade and cooling the skin can be lifesaving before paramedics arrive.
1
Slow The Bleeding
2
Open The Airway
3
Check For Concussion
4
Prevent A Seizure
The head-tilt chin-lift technique was standardized in the 1960s and is still the first step taught in every CPR certification course.
1
Make Them Vomit
2
Wait And Watch Them
3
Go To Emergency Room
4
Give Them Milk
Button batteries can burn through a child's esophagus in as little as two hours by generating an electrical current in moist tissue.
1
Push The Bridge Straight
2
Tilt The Head Back
3
Lean Forward And Pinch
4
Pack It With Tissue
Leaning forward prevents blood from draining into the throat which can cause choking or dangerous aspiration.
1
Vigorous Exercise
2
A Hot Meal
3
Fluids And Cool Air
4
A Tight Bandage
Heat-related faintness is often caused by blood pooling in dilated leg veins — lying down and rehydrating restores circulation quickly.
1
Let Them Sleep Alone
2
Rest And Seek Help
3
Give Aspirin Right Away
4
Keep Them Active
The NFL changed its concussion protocol in 2011 after research showed that returning to activity too soon can cause permanent brain damage.
1
Tilt Head Back
2
Apply Ice Inside
3
Pack It With Tissue
4
Seek Medical Help
Tilting the head back can cause blood to flow into the throat, creating a choking or nausea risk.
1
Rinse With Soap
2
Store In Milk
3
Keep It Dry
4
Wrap In Dry Cloth
Milk preserves the tooth's root cells, giving dentists the best chance to successfully reimplant it within an hour.
1
Sunburn Reaction
2
Mild Dehydration
3
Heat Exhaustion
4
Heat Stroke
Unlike heat exhaustion, heat stroke causes the body to stop sweating entirely, making it a life-threatening emergency.
1
Apply Heat Immediately
2
Push It Back In
3
Immobilize And Wait
4
Stretch The Joint
Attempting to pop a dislocated shoulder back yourself can tear nerves and blood vessels — only trained medical staff should do this.
1
Their Own Bag
2
Nothing At All
3
A Flat Board
4
A Rolled Blanket
Elevating the legs about 12 inches helps blood flow back toward vital organs, which is a key step in treating shock.
1
Press Firmly Down
2
Rinse With Water
3
Pour Alcohol On It
4
Remove Any Clots
Continuous firm pressure for at least ten minutes is far more effective than repeatedly lifting the dressing to check the wound.
1
Pull It Out Carefully
2
Leave It In Place
3
Push It Deeper In
4
Rinse It Out
An embedded object acts as a plug slowing blood loss — removing it can cause sudden dangerous bleeding before help arrives.
1
Mild Itching Only
2
Skin Redness
3
Watery Eyes
4
Throat Swelling
Throat swelling can close the airway within minutes, which is why anaphylaxis is treated as a life-threatening emergency requiring epinephrine.
1
Has Some Blistering
2
Feels Very Painful
3
Larger Than Your Palm
4
Skin Looks Red
Paramedics use the palm rule — any burn covering more than one palm-sized area on an adult needs immediate hospital treatment.
1
Pack It With Cloth
2
Rinse With Water
3
Do Not Plug It
4
Apply Firm Pressure
Blood from the ear after a head injury may signal a skull fracture — plugging it traps dangerous pressure inside.
1
Lay Them Flat Down
2
Help Them Use Inhaler
3
Give Them Water
4
Loosen Their Clothing
Sitting upright and using a rescue inhaler opens narrowed airways fastest — lying flat makes breathing harder during an attack.
1
Possible Brain Injury
2
Low Blood Sugar
3
Normal Eye Response
4
Mild Concussion Only
Unequal pupils after head trauma are a classic emergency sign that pressure may be building inside the skull.
1
Suck Out The Venom
2
Keep Still And Call 911
3
Cut Around The Bite
4
Apply A Tourniquet
Moving pumps venom faster through the body — sucking and cutting are outdated myths that cause more harm than good.
1
Stop, Drop, And Roll
2
Pull The Clothing Off
3
Run For Water Fast
4
Fan The Flames Out
Stop, Drop, And Roll has been taught since the 1970s because running feeds oxygen to flames and makes burns far worse.
1
Skin Looks Red Around It
2
The Wound Feels Numb
3
Edges Won't Stay Closed
4
Bleeding Stopped Quickly
Wounds longer than half an inch or with gaping edges rarely heal cleanly without stitches and carry a higher infection risk.
1
Wrap The Chest Tightly
2
Lay Them On Their Back
3
Encourage Deep Breathing
4
Keep Them Upright And Still
Wrapping broken ribs was once standard practice but is now discouraged because it restricts breathing and raises pneumonia risk.
1
Go To Emergency Room Immediately
2
Wait And Watch For Symptoms
3
Make Them Vomit Right Away
4
Give Them Bread To Push It Down
Sharp objects can perforate the esophagus or intestines — only imaging can confirm safe passage through the digestive tract.
1
Hold Near Open Flame
2
Pack Them In Snow
3
Warm Water, Not Rubbing
4
Rub Them Vigorously
Rubbing frostbitten skin breaks ice crystals that have formed in the tissue, causing permanent cell damage that gentle warming avoids.
1
Lay Them Flat
2
Give Them Sugar
3
Call Poison Control
4
Give Them Water
If a diabetic person is conscious and shaky, sugar raises blood glucose fast — juice or candy works within minutes.
1
Give Them Water
2
Sit Them Upright
3
Raise Their Legs
4
Fan Their Face
Raising the legs about 12 inches sends blood back to the brain — most people recover within a minute using this method.
1
Rapid Blinking
2
Pale Skin
3
Sweaty Palms
4
Face Drooping
The FAST acronym — Face, Arms, Speech, Time — was developed in 1998 to help bystanders spot strokes before paramedics arrive.
1
Tell Them To Snap Out
2
Give Them Cold Water
3
Call 911 Immediately
4
Stay Calm With Them
Panic attacks peak within 10 minutes — a calm reassuring presence lowers adrenaline faster than any other bystander action.
1
Shock
2
Concussion
3
Heat Exhaustion
4
Dehydration
Shock causes the heart to race while blood pressure drops — the body is desperately trying to keep vital organs supplied with blood.
1
Apply Ice Directly
2
Save Every Fragment
3
Discard The Pieces
4
Rinse With Mouthwash
Dentists can sometimes bond tooth fragments back — keeping them moist in milk or saliva gives the best chance of successful repair.
1
Seek Medical Advice
2
Wait And Watch
3
Give Them Bread
4
Make Them Cough
Coins usually pass safely but button batteries look identical and are a medical emergency — always get a professional check immediately.
1
Leave It And Get Help
2
Pull It Straight Out
3
Push It All The Way Through
4
Cut The Skin Around It
Fish hooks have barbs designed to resist removal — attempting to pull one out can tear tissue and cause serious infection or nerve damage.
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Most drivers believe they would handle roadside emergencies with confidence. Reality tells a different story. This quiz separates the genuinely prepared from those who only think they are — revealing whether someone is a true roadside hero or an unexpected hazard.
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