What to do if a child gets candy stuck in his throat

Children eating sugar stuck throat need to immediately use the Heimlich method of first aid, and then promptly sent to the medical treatment.
Children eat sugar stuck in the throat, if only a smaller sugar cube, and did not appear asthma, sweat, hoarse voice, cyanosis and other symptoms, you can drink a lot of water to try to impact the sugar cube into the esophagus. When the sugar cube is large enough to cause airway obstruction and severe shortness of breath, the Heimlich maneuver needs to be used immediately.
For children less than 1 year of age, the rescuer places the child face down so that his or her body rests on his or her arms and on his or her knees. The rescuer’s arm is pressed against the chest, with the thumb and the remaining four fingers stuck in the mandible, and the other hand is tapped five times on the child’s back between the shoulder blades; then the child is turned upright, and in the lower part of the infant’s sternum, the index and middle fingers are pressed against the chest five times until the foreign body is spit out.
For children older than 1 year old, the rescuer allows the child to stand, wraps both arms around the waist from behind him or her, and impacts rapidly, continuously, and forcefully on the upper back of the child’s chest, forcing the child’s thoracic pressure to increase and discharging the sugar cubes and thus relieving the airway obstruction.
Children who can cough effectively, suggesting that the airway is not completely obstructed, should be encouraged to cough up the obstruction, as coughing is more effective than any shock method. After resuscitation, the child needs to be transported to the doctor for relevant investigations to clarify the condition and follow-up treatment.