The Secondary Survey
When to carry out the secondary survey, what it involves, and how to gather key information and monitor the casualty.
After the primary survey (DRABC), once the casualty is breathing normally and there are no immediate life-threatening dangers.
Secondary Survey – Step by Step
The secondary survey helps you identify injuries or illness and decide what support is needed while waiting for help.
Tell the casualty what you are doing and keep them calm.
Look for visible injuries, swelling, deformity, or signs of bleeding.
Find out the cause (fall, illness, exposure, accident).
Use SAMPLE to remember what to ask.
Provide appropriate first aid within your training.
Keep checking the casualty and record changes in condition.
SAMPLE – What to Ask
SAMPLE Checklist – Casualty History
Use SAMPLE to gather important information during the secondary survey.
Tick each item as you ask the question.
If emergency services attend, pass this information to them clearly and calmly.
A colleague feels unwell and sits on the floor. After confirming the area is safe and they are breathing normally,
the first aider checks for injuries, asks what happened, gathers key information (e.g. allergies and medication),
provides appropriate first aid, and monitors their condition until help arrives.
What information would you want to collect from a casualty to help emergency services when they arrive?
The secondary survey takes place after DRABC and focuses on identifying injuries, gathering relevant information,
giving appropriate first aid, and monitoring the casualty until help arrives.
