Get Seizure Smart!
Follow these easy steps to help someone during or after a seizure.
- There are many different types of seizures.
- Seizures might not look like what you would expect. Some seizures cause a person to act confused or stare. Other seizures may cause a person to lose awareness and shake.
- Most seizures last for just a few minutes.
First aid for all types of seizures
To help someone who is having any type of seizure:
Do I Call 911?
Seizures don’t usually require emergency medical attention. Only call 911 if one or more of these things happen:
- The person has never had a seizure before.
- The person has trouble breathing or waking up after the seizure.
- The seizure lasts longer than 5 minutes.
- The person has another seizure soon after the first one.
- The person is hurt during the seizure.
- The seizure happens in water.
- The person has a health condition like diabetes or heart disease, or is pregnant.
- Stay with the person and keep them safe from injury until the seizure ends.
- After it ends, help the person sit in a safe place.
- Once the person is alert and can talk, comfort them and explain what happened, speaking calmly and in very plain terms.
- Keep yourself and other people calm.
- Check to see if the person is wearing a medical bracelet, which would tell you if they have epilepsy or another medical condition, and who to call for help.
- Offer to call a ride, friend, or relative to make sure the person gets home safely.
Extra steps may be needed to help someone who is having a seizure with muscle stiffening, jerking, falling, or loss of awareness—called a “generalized seizure”
When a person is having a generalized seizure, they may cry out, fall, shake or jerk, and become unaware of what’s going on around them.
To help someone who is having a generalized seizure:
- Ease the person to the floor.
- Turn the person gently onto one side. This will help their breathing.
- Clear the area around them of anything hard or sharp to prevent injury.
- Put something soft and flat, like a folded jacket, under their head.
- Take off their eyeglasses.
- Loosen ties or anything around their neck that may make it hard to breathe.
- Time the seizure. Call 911 if the seizure lasts longer than 5 minutes.