- See if you can wake them by calling their name and/ or shaking them firmly but gently.
- If there’s no response, with your cheek over their nose and mouth, look down the body to see their chest moving and feel for breath on your cheek. (Do this for 10 seconds).
- If they are not breathing, call 999 for an ambulance, following the operator’s instructions.
- If they are breathing but not responsive, place them in the recovery position if you feel able, and call 999, following the operator’s instructions.
- Stay with them until help arrives.
After an incident | NHS How to put an adult in the recovery position | St John Ambulance
Recovery position | Wikipedia Why queer people are stocking up on this life-saving nasal spray for drug overdoses | Queerty* | 1 Oct 2021 Global Drug Survey | 2017 | 4m 34s
Good Samaritan law
In researching this content, there are very few cases on which to base any judgement; various scenarios are discussed and the words ‘probably’ and ‘maybe’ are used a lot when referring to the outcome of an imagined scenario in court.
Good Samaritan law | Wikipedia