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The Recovery Position

7 Sep 2025

Tags: Emergency Procedure | Procedures

The Recovery Position: A Prehospital Essential

The recovery position (also called the lateral or semi-prone position) is a safe way to place an unconscious but breathing patient. It helps maintain airway patency, reduces the risk of aspiration of vomit or secretions, and provides a stable posture until further care arrives.

It is recommended by the NHS, Resuscitation Council UK, and first aid organisations including St John Ambulance and the British Red Cross.

Indications & Contraindications For Recovery Position

✅Use the recovery position when:

  • The patient is unresponsive but breathing normally.

  • You need to protect the airway and allow drainage of fluids.

  • You want to keep your hands free to summon help or manage other patients.

❌Avoid or adapt the recovery position if: 

  • The patient is not breathing normally, begin CPR instead.

  • There is a suspected spinal injury, maintain airway with manual techniques rather than rolling.

  • The patient is an infant, use infant-specific positioning instead.

 

The Recovery Position

Step-By-Step Guide

1. Preparation

Check for danager

Assess responsiveness and breathing

Remove glasses and clear nearby hazards

2. Positioning The Arms

Place the arm nearest you at a right angle, elbow bent, palm up.

Place the person’s arm that is nearest to you at a right angle to their body,

Take the far arm, bring it across the chest, and rest the back of the hand against the cheek nearest you.

Place the person’s arm that is nearest to you at a right angle to their body,

3. Leg Placement

Bend the far knee so the foot is flat on the floor.

Place the person’s arm that is nearest to you at a right angle to their body,

4. Rolling the Patient

Use the bent knee as a lever to gently roll the patient toward you.

Use the bent knee as a lever to gently roll the patient toward you.

5. Final Adjustments

Tilt the head back slightly to open the airway.

Keep the top leg bent at a right angle to stabilise the body.

Continue to monitor breathing and pulse.

Keep the top leg bent at a right angle to stabilise the body.

Evidence and Clinical Relevance

While the recovery position may feel “basic,” studies show it is highly effective:

Paediatric data suggest children placed in the recovery position after reduced responsiveness were less likely to require hospital admission (Eich et al., 2009).

In adult poisoning cases, semi-prone positions reduced aspiration compared with supine (Hall et al., 2008).

International resuscitation guidelines consistently emphasise lateral positioning as the safest option for an unconscious, breathing patient.

The Recovery Position Video

I-Gel Key Points

  • Use the recovery position for any unconscious but breathing patient without suspected spinal injury.

  • It is a low-tech, high-impact intervention that can be delivered by both trained clinicians and bystanders.

  • In seizure management, it protects the airway during recovery.

  • Even in an era of advanced prehospital equipment, this simple manual skill continues to save lives daily.

Bibliography

British Red Cross. (n.d.). Unresponsive and breathing. British Red Cross. https://www.redcross.org.uk/first-aid/learn-first-aid/unresponsive-and-breathing

Eich, C., Roessler, M., Nemeth, M., Russo, S. G., Heuer, J. F., & Timmermann, A. (2009). Characteristics and outcome of patients in the recovery position after prehospital emergency ventilation. Resuscitation, 80(12), 1373–1377. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.resuscitation.2009.09.014

Epilepsy Society. (2025). First aid for epileptic seizures: Recovery position. Epilepsy Society. https://epilepsysociety.org.uk/about-epilepsy/first-aid-epileptic-seizures/recovery-position

Geeky Medics. (2025). Recovery position OSCE guide. Geeky Medics. https://geekymedics.com/recovery-position-osce-guide/

Hall, A. H., Smolinske, S. C., & Conrad, F. L. (2008). Positioning for aspiration prevention in acute poisoning: Prone, semiprone, and lateral recumbent positions. Journal of Toxicology: Clinical Toxicology, 46(9), 989–992. https://doi.org/10.1080/15563650802424634

National Health Service. (2024). How to put someone in the recovery position. NHS. https://www.nhs.uk/tests-and-treatments/first-aid/recovery-position/

Resuscitation Council UK. (2021). Adult basic life support guidelines. Resuscitation Council UK. https://www.resus.org.uk/library/2021-resuscitation-guidelines/adult-basic-life-support

St John Ambulance. (n.d.). How to put someone in the recovery position. St John Ambulance. https://www.sja.org.uk/first-aid-advice/recovery-position/

Vanpee, D., Swine, C., & Lamy, M. (2002). The recovery position: What is the evidence? Resuscitation, 53(3), 289–296. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0300-9572(02)00038-6

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