This training module will teach you how to correctly administer an EpiPen (epinephrine auto-injector) in case of severe anaphylaxis. You'll learn the official medical sequence used by emergency responders and healthcare professionals. No prior medical training is required—just follow along carefully through each step.
Anaphylaxis is a life-threatening allergic reaction that develops rapidly (seconds to minutes). Look for multiple symptoms occurring together: difficulty breathing, severe swelling (lips, face, throat), loss of consciousness, rapid or weak pulse, severe itching, hives covering the body, or collapse.
⚠️ Common Mistake: Waiting for all symptoms to appear before acting. You don't need to see every symptom—multiple signs = act immediately. Time is critical.
🔴 CRITICAL FAIL: Assuming this is just anxiety, allergies, or asthma. Any rapid systemic reaction = treat as anaphylaxis. It's safer to use EpiPen unnecessarily than to delay.
Hold the EpiPen firmly in your dominant hand with your thumb and fingers on the sides (not on the orange tip or needle end). With your other hand, remove the blue safety release cap by pulling it straight out. Do not twist or bend it—pull straight and firmly. Set the cap aside; you won't need it again.
⚠️ Common Mistake: Gripping the EpiPen incorrectly (thumb on orange tip). This blocks the injection site and can cause accidental injection into your own hand.
The correct injection site is the outer thigh muscle (vastus lateralis)—the outer, middle part of the thigh. This muscle is large, easily accessible, and allows epinephrine to be absorbed rapidly into the bloodstream. You can inject through clothing if necessary; do not remove pants or search for skin. The outer thigh works whether the person is standing, sitting, or lying down.
⚠️ Common Mistake: Injecting into the arm, buttocks, or inner thigh. Only the outer thigh muscle is medically approved and ensures proper absorption.
Position the orange tip against the outer thigh at a 90-degree angle (straight down, perpendicular to the thigh). Push the device firmly into the thigh muscle with a quick, confident motion. You will hear a loud "click" sound when the needle is activated and the injection begins. Do not remove the device yet—you have completed the injection, but you must hold it in place for the next step.
⚠️ Common Mistake: Injecting at an angle or pushing slowly. The needle must penetrate the muscle at 90 degrees for proper medication delivery.
Keep the EpiPen firmly pressed against the thigh for 3–10 seconds (follow the specific EpiPen product instructions—most require 3 seconds, some require up to 10). Do not remove it early. Count slowly: "one-one-thousand, two-one-thousand, three-one-thousand" or listen for the click to confirm the injection is complete. Your hand pressure ensures the medication is fully delivered into the muscle.
⚠️ Common Mistake: Removing the device too quickly or not holding it firmly. Incomplete hold time means incomplete medication delivery.
Withdraw the EpiPen straight out from the thigh, then massage the injection site for 10 seconds to distribute the medication. Keep the person lying down (unless they are vomiting—then turn them on their side). Monitor their breathing and consciousness closely. Get emergency services on the way immediately if not already called. Even if the person feels better, hospital transport is mandatory—anaphylaxis can return within minutes to hours (biphasic reaction).
🔴 CRITICAL FAIL: Letting the person leave or go home without hospital care. Second doses and IV medications may be needed. Hospital observation is non-negotiable.
Complete this final quiz to assess your mastery of EpiPen administration.
Training Score: 0 out of 6
Final Quiz Score: 0 out of 5
Overall Accuracy Rate: 0%
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