Having exerted so much effort to rescue the person from the water, we absolutely cannot let it be for nothing.
He quickly cleared the patient's nasal and oral passages to maintain a clear airway.
Then he positioned the patient flat on their back, with head tilted and chin lifted.
Upon feeling, the patient's heartbeat was very weak, and there was no respiration.
Ignoring his own physical exhaustion, he urgently began to perform CPR on the patient.
Many people think that after a drowning victim is pulled ashore, running with them upside down, or pressing on their belly, patting their back, and such methods will make the drowned person spit out the water they swallowed, but these are not the correct methods for rescue.
Drowning victims never die from drinking too much water but from asphyxiation.
Typically, it only takes two to three minutes after drowning for the brain to lose consciousness.
