Why this matters most in restaurants

Restaurants are the workplace where choking incidents happen most often. The combination of factors that make this a recurring scenario: unfamiliar food, eating while talking, hurried meals, alcohol service, distractions, and customers across every age group including the elderly. Most choking incidents resolve naturally — the person coughs, the object dislodges, life goes on. But severe choking that doesn’t resolve in 30–60 seconds is a true medical emergency, and the staff member nearest the table is the only person who can help before paramedics arrive.

That’s the entire case for training restaurant staff in first aid. Not just compliance with Ontario Regulation 1101. Not just liability reduction. The single highest-impact reason: every server, host, manager, and bartender in your restaurant will eventually witness a choking incident, and trained staff respond in the first 30 seconds that matter most.

Recognizing choking — the signs that matter

Standard First Aid teaches the difference between mild choking and severe choking, and the response differs dramatically.

Mild choking

The person is coughing forcefully, can still speak or make sound, and is showing controlled distress. The instinct here is to do something — but the best response is usually to stay close, encourage them to keep coughing, and don’t intervene physically. The cough is the body’s most effective way of clearing the airway. Intervening with back blows can actually push the object deeper. Bring a glass of water nearby, ask if they need anything, and stay until they’re recovered.

Severe choking

The person cannot speak, breathe, or cough effectively. They may be making the universal choking sign — hands clutched at the throat. They may look panicked. Their lips or face may be turning blue. They will become unresponsive in 60–90 seconds if the airway isn’t cleared.

This is the moment to act.

The 6-step response protocol

  1. Confirm

    Ask: “Are you choking? Can I help?” If the person nods or can’t speak, treat it as severe choking. The Good Samaritan Act protects you when acting in good faith.

  2. Get help — 911

    Tell another staff member to call 911 immediately. Don’t leave the casualty alone. If you’re alone, do the first cycle of back blows and thrusts, then call 911 with phone on speaker while continuing.

  3. 5 back blows

    Stand to the side and behind the casualty. Lean them forward at the waist (head lower than chest). Deliver 5 firm back blows between the shoulder blades with the heel of your hand. Check if the object came out after each blow.

  4. 5 abdominal thrusts (Heimlich)

    If back blows haven’t worked, stand behind the casualty. Place a fist (thumb side inward) just above the navel and below the rib cage. Cover with your other hand. Deliver 5 quick inward and upward thrusts. Check if the object came out after each thrust.

  5. Continue cycles

    Alternate 5 back blows and 5 abdominal thrusts. Continue until the object is dislodged, the casualty becomes unresponsive, or EMS arrives. Don’t stop. Don’t slow down.

  6. If casualty becomes unresponsive

    Lower them carefully to the ground. Begin CPR: 30 chest compressions, then check the mouth for the object before giving rescue breaths. If you can see the object, sweep it out with your finger. Continue CPR until EMS arrives. The chest compressions themselves can dislodge the airway obstruction.

Don’t: stick your finger blindly into the casualty’s mouth searching for the object — this can push it deeper. Only do a finger sweep if you can actually see the object during CPR.

Special scenarios

Pregnant customer

Use chest thrusts instead of abdominal thrusts. Place your fist at the centre of the breastbone (sternum) and pull inward sharply. Same 5-back-blows-5-thrusts cycle.

Obese customer where you can’t reach around

Use chest thrusts instead of abdominal thrusts, same technique as for a pregnant casualty. Place the fist at the centre of the breastbone.

Child over 1 year

Same protocol as adults — alternating 5 back blows and 5 abdominal thrusts. Adjust force to the child’s size; you don’t need adult-level strength.

Infant under 1 year (under 25 kg)

Different technique. 5 back blows while supporting the infant face-down on your forearm, head lower than chest. Then turn the infant face-up and deliver 5 chest thrusts (not abdominal thrusts — infant abdomens are softer and abdominal thrusts can cause internal injury). Continue cycles. See our infant choking guide for detailed technique.

Casualty alone or refusing help

Self-Heimlich: lean over the back of a chair or sturdy edge and deliver inward and upward thrusts to your own abdomen. Not as effective as having someone help, but better than doing nothing. If a customer refuses help, stay close and monitor — they will become unresponsive if the obstruction persists, at which point you can begin CPR (consent is implied for unconscious casualties).

What restaurants typically get wrong

  • Intervening with back blows during mild choking when the person is coughing forcefully. Let them cough first; only intervene if they progress to severe choking.
  • Hesitating to act because of liability fear. The Good Samaritan Act protects you in Ontario when acting in good faith.
  • Not calling 911 fast enough. The 911 call should happen at the same time as the first cycle of back blows, not after.
  • Stopping too early. Choking response can take multiple cycles. Don’t stop until the object is out or EMS arrives.
  • Forgetting CPR is the next step if the casualty becomes unresponsive. Standard First Aid teaches the seamless transition from choking response to CPR.
  • Not training all staff. The first responder is whoever is closest to the table. Train across FOH and BOH.

Prevention: what restaurants can also do

Beyond response training, restaurants can reduce choking risk:

  • Train serving staff to check on tables shortly after food is served
  • Stock pre-cut sliders or smaller portions for guests who request them
  • Ensure menu items high in choking risk (steak, mochi, certain raw fish, sticky desserts) are served at appropriate sizes
  • Be cautious with intoxicated customers — alcohol increases choking risk
  • Manage children’s menus to avoid choking-hazard foods for young diners
  • Encourage staff to alert management to any close-call incident so patterns can be addressed

Why hands-on training matters here more than anywhere

The choking response protocol can be read in 5 minutes — and you’ve just done that. But reading isn’t the same as actually performing back blows and abdominal thrusts on a manikin under an instructor’s eye. In a real emergency, when adrenaline kicks in and the casualty’s lips are turning blue, you fall back on muscle memory, not knowledge.

Standard First Aid + CPR training includes hands-on practice of the choking protocol on adult, child, and infant manikins. Students rehearse the technique until it’s automatic. That’s why the in-person practical assessment is mandatory and why online-only certifications don’t satisfy WSIB requirements.

Note: This article is an educational overview. It is not a substitute for proper hands-on first aid and CPR training with a certified instructor. In a real emergency, call 911 and apply the response protocol.

Training restaurant staff is the easy part

Most Toronto restaurants train Standard First Aid + CPR through an on-site session that fits around service operations — closed days, pre-service afternoons, weekend mornings, or pre-opening prep weeks. A single 2-day session covers your whole team. Recertification is needed every 3 years.

Train your restaurant team

On-site Standard First Aid + CPR for your restaurant. Scheduled around service hours. Heimlich maneuver and CPR taught with hands-on manikin practice.

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