No student devices needed. Know more
36 questions
Why does the American Red Cross teach this course?
To help people stay calm in emergencies.
To help people make appropriate decisions when they are confronted with an emergency.
To help people in an emergency keep a victim’s injuries from getting worse until emergency medical services (EMS) personnel arrive and take over.
All of the above
You notice a patron that is swimming laps who suddenly slips under water without a struggle and does not resurface. This person is probably:
A passive victim who needs help.
A distressed swimmer who needs help.
An active victim who needs help.
An intermediate swimmer who does not need help.
Primary responsibilities of a lifeguard include:
Inspecting the pool and rescue equipment before the facility opens and paying close attention to patrons in the water by actively searching their assigned zone.
Fixing the pool rope and lane lines and ensuring the changing rooms are clean.
Following the health codes, answering a patron’s question and making sure patrons shower before using the pool.
Passing out the pool rules to all the patrons.
A child accidentally falls from the deck into the water and is in distress. After you activate the emergency action plan (EAP), what steps should you take next?
Clear the pool and alert management of the emergency.
Encourage them to stay calm and swim back to the edge of the pool.
Enter the water, approach the victim and bring them to a safe exit point.
Obtain consent from the child’s parent before rescuing the child.
The size and shape of a lifeguard’s zone should allow them to recognize and reach a victim in the furthest and deepest part of their zone within:
45 seconds
1 ½ minutes
30 seconds
2 minutes
While searching your zone, you notice a person motionless in the water. The steps you follow in a water emergency are performed in the following order:
Perform a secondary assessment, perform a primary assessment, size-up the scene, activate the emergency action plan (EAP), and summon EMS personnel.
Perform a primary assessment, activate the EAP, summon EMS personnel, perform a secondary assessment and size-up the scene.
Size-up the scene, activate the EAP, form an initial impression, summon EMS personnel, perform a primary assessment and perform a secondary assessment.
Activate the EAP, enter the water, perform an appropriate rescue, move the victim to a safe exit point, remove the victim from the water and provide emergency care as needed.
While searching your zone, you witness a patron struggling while swimming and then go under water. Which of the following applies?
You would use the RID factor to determine what to do.
You should continue to scan the pool until emergency back-up coverage is available.
You have duty to act and perform the appropriate rescue.
You should notify off duty lifeguards to provide care for the victim.
A lifeguard can no longer see some of the patrons at one side of the swimming area from their station because of glare from the afternoon sun. To maintain effective patron surveillance, the lifeguard should:
Document the issue and present it at next month’s staff meeting.
Adjust their position slightly to remove the glare from the surveillance area.
Leave the area to find the supervisor for assistance.
Stay in the same position since the patrons are strong swimmers.
A couple of patrons start running on the pool deck. You blow your whistle to get their attention. Next, you enforce the rules and regulations by:
Calling your supervisor.
Giving them a warning.
Telling them they could slip or fall and must walk on the deck.
Telling them they might be asked to leave and demanding they stop it now.
When caring for a suspected head, neck or spinal injury in water, proper manual in-line stabilization is:
Provided using the head splint technique.
Less important than on land due to the support provided by the water.
The only necessary technique needed if EMS personnel are close by.
Provided by bystanders if the lifeguard needs to clear the pool.
The objective of the facility safety team is to:
Provide emergency back-up coverage when lifeguards are performing a water rescue.
Assist lifeguards in maintaining a safe environment and providing emergency care.
Help lifeguards understand the facility’s EAP.
Perform patron surveillance when lifeguards need to take a break.
You are a lifeguard on surveillance duty during a busy family swim session. It is important to:
Scan all areas in your assigned zone of coverage, wear your hip pack and carry your rescue tube with you at all times.
Have a first aid kit, an automated external defibrillator (AED) and a backboard immediately available to you on the pool deck next to your station.
Rope off and close all areas of the facility that have water over 5-feet deep.
Have enough lifejackets on hand and require all non-swimmers to use them.
A head, neck or spinal injury rarely happens:
In deep water at a supervised facility.
When someone is running on the pool deck.
In shallow water that is clearly signed No Diving.
From collisions between swimmers.
Which of the following is true about accidental fecal releases (AFRs)?
Require water treatment, temporary pool closure and immediate lifeguard attention.
AFRs do not require immediate attention.
Managers only need to be concerned with AFRs.
It is part of the routine daily operation of a pool that must be done for safety.
Which of the following is a primary responsibility of a lifeguard?
Testing the pool water chemistry
Monitoring the performance of the other lifeguards on duty
Enforcing facility rules and regulations and educating patrons about them
Performing opening duties, closing duties or facility safety checks and inspections
You are lifeguarding during a family swim session when you notice a swimmer swimming full lengths of the pool under water. What should you do?
Activate the facility EAP, clear the pool and remove them from the pool.
Immediately stop them from continuing the activity and explain the dangers of the activity.
Immediately get the attention of the swimmer and instruct them to leave the pool for breaking pool rules.
Alert the pool manager of the situation once your shift is over and document the event.
After removing a responsive victim you suspect has a spinal injury from the water, you should do all the following except:
Make sure 911 or the local emergency number.
Dry the victim off and apply the pads of an AED.
Protect the victim from becoming cold.
Reassure the victim and perform a secondary assessment.
You enter the water to rescue a victim with a suspected spinal injury. You determine that the victim is not breathing. What should you do next?
Delay removal from the water and provide 2 minutes of in-water ventilations.
Remove the victim water using a modified spinal backboarding procedure.
Remove the victim from the water using the Extrication Using a Backboard at the Pool Edge technique.
Remove the victim from the water using the spinal backboarding procedure.
A lifeguard keeps an eye on the patrons of the pool, actively searching and checking the bottom, middle and surface of the water. The lifeguard is demonstrating:
Effective communication.
Implied consent.
The RID factor.
Effective scanning.
A parent and child walk over to you; the parent states that the child fell on the pool deck and hit their head. You notice there is blood and fluid running from the child’s ear and they are feeling dizzy. You activate the EAP and summon EMS personnel. What steps should you take next?
Bring the child a chair, ask them to sit down and tell them not to move. Perform a secondary assessment while waiting for EMS personnel to arrive.
Have the parent transport the child to the emergency room since they are already walking.
Have the child lie down on the pool deck and perform a secondary assessment while waiting for EMS personnel to arrive.
Provide manual stabilization while the other lifeguards prepare to backboard.
The lifeguard supervisor expects the pool to be very busy in the afternoon. For effective patron surveillance, the supervisor sets up multiple lifeguard stations to reduce the number of patrons watched by each lifeguard. This type of coverage is called:
Back-up coverage.
Rescue coverage.
Zone coverage.
Total coverage.
The following statements describe appropriate rescue techniques for a victim with a suspected spinal injury, EXCEPT:
If the victim is at the surface in deep water, you may need a rescue tube to support yourself and the victim.
If the victim is submerged, you should not use the rescue tube when submerging and bringing the victim to the surface.
If the victim is small and is in shallow water, you do not need to use a backboard to extricate the victim.
If the victim is in shallow water, you do not need to use a rescue tube to support yourself.
A patron collides with another swimmer while diving into the pool and asks the lifeguard for help. Without performing an assessment, the lifeguard tells the patron that they can continue swimming. The patron leaves the facility and seeks medical attention from a hospital after they begins to feel tingling sensations in their arms and legs. The lifeguard may be:
A Good Samaritan.
Negligent.
Following the refusal-of-care principle.
Using the RID factor.
Why is it important to attend a pre-season orientation and training?
To ensure that lifeguards understand their responsibilities and know how to perform their job.
To ensure that lifeguards get practice with their facility’s safety and rescue equipment and emergency action plans.
To ensure lifeguards understand codes, rules and regulations of the facility.
None of the above.
During a weather-related power failure at a facility, you should:
Clear everyone from the pool.
Let patrons continue swimming.
Let patrons sit on the edge with their feet in the water.
Monitor weather reports while patrons continue to swim.
During in-service training, lifeguards practice the steps of recognizing a distressed swimmer, rescuing an active victim, informing management and speaking with witnesses. The lifeguards are practicing parts of a(n):
Communication plan.
Secondary assessment.
Emergency action plan.
Staff debriefing.
You enter the mechanical room and find a maintenance worker lying on their back on the floor next to a ladder. You check the scene and determine it is safe to enter. During your primary assessment, you find the victim is unresponsive but breathing. You must leave to get help, what should you do?
Place the victim in a recovery position.
Leave the victim just as they are.
Do not leave the victim since they are breathing, monitor their condition and wait for additional help to come.
Use a clothes drag to move the victim to where you can summon more help.
It is very hot in your facility and you are starting to doze on the stand. All of the following can help you stay alert EXECPT for:
Staying hydrated while drinking plenty of water.
Jumping in the pool while on surveillance duty to cool off.
Rotating more frequently.
Staying in a cooler area during breaks.
When completing an incident report:
Collect all factual information about what was seen, heard and the actions taken.
Include all details about the incident, including your opinion about how the incident happened.
Allow witnesses to discuss their thoughts about the incident before compiling their statements onto one report.
Do not allow the victim to leave until you have completed the report and your supervisor has signed it.
When placing a responsive victim with a suspected head, neck or spinal injury on a backboard, what in-line stabilization technique should you use?
The head and chin support
The hand hold position
The over-arm head splint
The recovery position
If three lifeguards are on duty, emergency back-up coverage takes place:
When a lifeguard is unable to show up to work for their shift.
When a lifeguard is unable to show up to work for their shift.
Whenever the facility EAP is activated.
When the facility has more patrons than its designed capacity allows.
When conducting a swim test, Lifeguards should use the:
Water Safety Steps
Water Safety Steps
Water Competency Sequence
Safe Swimming Steps
Members of the safety team, including non-lifeguard personnel, should be:
Trained in CPR if they interested in receiving training.
Trained to follow the other EAP duties that do not involve providing care.
Trained in first aid and CPR for non-professionals.
Trained and certified in first aid and CPR/ AED at the same level of the lifeguard team
You are approaching a victim who is horizontal in the water, at the surface in 4 feet of water. The victim is facing you and appears to be unconscious. What rescue technique would be appropriate in this situation?
Active victim front rescue.
Passive victim front rescue.
Passive victim in extreme shallow water – face up.
Submerged victim in shallow water.
A patron dives into the shallow end of the lap pool. You suspect a head, neck or spinal injury because the patron performed a high-risk, high-impact activity and has:
An elevated body temperature.
Blood in the ears and nose.
An irregular heartbeat.
Impaired hearing.
Which of the following statement(s) are true about the equipment that lifeguards should wear or carry?
Lifeguards should wear their rescue tube at all times when on surveillance duty.
Lifeguard should either wear a hip pack, or keep it strapped to their chair for easy access.
Lifeguards should keep latex gloves in their hip pack at all times.
All of the above.
Explore all questions with a free account