Course overview
Resources
Part 1: What you need to know about shock
Part 2: What learners need to know about shock
Part 3: Practical session delivery
Part 4: Common challenges for learners and trainers
Final quizzes
End of course

What knowledge learners need to have

What learners need to know about shock:

  • Shock is a life‑threatening condition that needs urgent treatment and an emergency response.
  • In first aid terms, shock is what happens when the body can no longer move enough blood – and therefore oxygen – to its vital organs to meet basic needs and clear wastes. It is a circulation problem, not just “feeling shocked”.
  • Shock can arise from many serious illnesses and injuries, including severe bleeding, burns, infection, heart problems, and severe allergic reactions.
  • Deterioration and shock are closely linked: as circulation fails and vital organs miss out on oxygen, a person can move from mild to moderate to serious to life‑threatening illness.
  • Many serious conditions share signs and symptoms, so it is not necessary to diagnose shock. It is far more important to recognise patterns of change and the signs that a person is seriously unwell or deteriorating and needs urgent medical attention.
  • Early recognition of serious illness and a quick first aid response – lying the person down, calling 111, keeping them warm, and managing breathing and bleeding – are critical because getting help early significantly improves outcomes.

Listen to the text above:

 

What makes an effective first aider
An effective first aider understands what is happening in the body and then applies simple actions quickly and calmly.

For shock, the treatment is much easier to remember when learners first grasp what shock actually is. Before you teach management, make sure they understand the basics of circulation. You might say something like:

“Think of your circulation as a simple system: the heart is the pump, the blood vessels are the container, and the blood is the fluid moving through it. Shock happens when there isn’t enough fluid (for example, with heavy bleeding), when the pump isn’t working properly, or when the container suddenly becomes too wide, like with severe infection, anaphylaxis, or a strong stress response. When that happens, blood pressure drops and the vital organs don’t get enough oxygen. Once you understand this simple pump–container–fluid idea, the steps to treat shock will make much more sense.”

An effective first aider can then link this picture to what they see in front of them, recognise when someone is becoming seriously unwell, and start those simple, early first aid actions without waiting for a perfect diagnosis.

Listen to the text above:

 

Soundbite

– Think of circulation as a simple system: the heart is the pump, the blood vessels are the container, and the blood is the fluid.
– Shock happens when there is not enough fluid (heavy bleeding), the pump is not working properly (some heart problems), or the container suddenly becomes too wide (severe infection, anaphylaxis, strong stress response).
– When this happens, blood pressure drops and vital organs do not get enough oxygen.
– Once you understand this simple pump–container–fluid idea, the steps to treat shock are much easier to remember and apply in real emergencies.

Listen to the soundbites: