Survey
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FIELD On the field Acute Care and Emergency Procedures Emergency Action Plan Needs to be implemented immediately Determine personnel that will be at the event (coaches, athletic therapists, students, doctors) Make sure the personnel know what their roles are (charge, call, control) Describe and determine what emergency equipment is available (AED, spine board, oxygen) EAP Make sure there is a phone accessible (call person) Be familiar with contact information for nearest hospital or medical center (address, phone number) Know the address for the location you are at and what the most accessible entrance for EMS is Charge: head person, takes control of the situation & decides what actions need to be taken (call ambulance) Call: Calls EMS,makes contact with medical authorities and otherwise assists the person in charge, either creates access for EMS if locked, or contacts front desk/ facility attendant Control: controls the scene, crowd, athletes, can also assist person in charge or Call person with access for EMS Scene Survey Is the scene safe to enter? (Has the play stopped, are there any hazardous materials around) How many injured athletes are there? Are there any noticeable fractures or dislocations? Any blood? Patients face: skin color, eyes tracking, level of distress Primary Survey Assessing life-threatening injuries Determines the existence of potentially life-threatening situations, including problems with level of consciousness, airway, breathing, circulation, severe bleeding, and shock Primary survey takes precedence over all other aspects of the assessment Any patient who has a life-threatening situation should be transported ASAP Primary Survey Life-threatening Conditions: Airway obstruction No breathing No circulation Profuse bleeding Shock Primary Survey Functional Signs of Evaluation: LOC Pulse Respiration Skin Color/ Condition Convulsions Breath LOC Level of Consciousness: AVPU Alert- patient is alert, awake, responsive to voice, and oriented to person, time and place Verbal- patient responds to voice but is not fully oriented to person, time, or place Painful- patient does not respond to voice but does respond to painful stimulus Unconscious/unresponsive- patient does not respond to verbal or painful stimulus Primary Survey- ABC’s Establish Airway, Breathing and Circulation Airway: use head tilt/ chin lift- lift under chin with one hand while pushing down on the patient’s forehead with the other Tongue is most common cause of obstruction ONLY use modified jaw thrust if there is a suspected cervical injury Perform a finger sweep to remove any objects in the mouth ABC’s Breathing: maintain open airway place ear over mouth, observe chest, look listen and feel for breath sounds 510 seconds Listen for rate (how fast they are breathing), rhythm (regular, deep, shallow), and quality (wheezy, regular, gurgling) Normal rate for adults= 12-20 breaths/ minute If airway is obstructed, repeat finger sweep Rate may be normal but breath may be shallow, labored, or noisy could indicate shock ABC’s Circulation: feel for a pulse in the carotid artery along the side of the neck or in the radial artery at the wrist, feel for 510 seconds Feel for rate (how fast the pulse is), rhythm (regular, thready, irregular), quality (weak, strong) Normal rate for adults= 60-100 beats/ minute Rapid and weak pulse could mean shock, bleeding, diabetic coma, or heat exhaustion Rapid and strong pulse could mean heatstroke or severe fright Strong but slow pulse could mean skull fracture, stroke No pulse= cardiac arrest or death Skin Temperature Skin Temperature: normal= 36.8*C- 37*C, use a thermometer to get accurate readings (under tongue or rectal), changes in in body temperature can be reflected in the skin Hot, dry skin can be infection/ disease, or overexposure to environmental heat Cool, clammy can reflect trauma, shock, or heat exhaustion Cool, dry skin can result from overexposure to cold Skin Color Skin Color: Normal= pink or brown Flushed or red= heatstroke, sunburn, allergic reaction, HBP, or elevated temp Pale, ashen, or white skin can mean insufficient circulation, shock, fright, hemorrhage, heat exhaustion, insulin shock Skin Bluish in color in lips, fingernail beds= airway obstruction Yellowish color may indicate liver disease or dysfunction Dark skinned person in shock= grayish color outside of mouth, nose, and bluish color in nail beds, tongue, inside of mouth Pupils Pupils are extremely sensitive to situations affecting nervous system Normal- both round, equal in size, reactive and accommodating to light Need to know which athletes have irregular and unequal pupils, or if they are on nervous system depressant drugs If one or both eyes dilated= head injury, shock, heatstroke, hemorrhage, stimulant drug Failure to accommodate= brain injury, alcohol/drug poisoning Blood Pressure Blood Pressure: Amount of pressure exerted on arterial walls, systolic- heart pumping blood, diastolic- residual pressure between heart beats Normal: Males 120/ 80 mm Hg, females are 8-10 mm Hg lower Lowered blood pressure= hemorrhage, shock, heart attack, or internal organ injury High Blood Pressure: Hypertension Primary= 90% all cases with no disease associated with it. Secondary= underlying causes: kidney disorder, overactive adrenal glands, tumors, meds, pregnancy, narrowing of aorta= coronary artery disease, congestive heart failure, stroke High= Sys >/= 140-160, Dias >/=90-100 Shock Occurs when a diminished amount of blood is available to the circulatory system- dilation of blood vessels in vascular system= collapse of vascular system leading to tissue death More likely to happen to severe injuries: severe bleeding, fractures, internal injuries, or certain conditions= extreme fatigue, extreme exposure to heat or cold, extreme dehydration, or illnesses ‘ Different types of shock: hypovolemic, respiratory, neurogenic, psychogenic, cardiogenic, septic, anaphylactic, and metabolic Shock Signs and Symptoms: Moist, pale, cool, clammy skin, weak and rapid pulse, increased and shallow breathing, decreased blood pressure, and if severe, urinary retention and fecal incontinence Blood pressure- systolic is < 90 mm Hg Patient may seem drowsy or sluggish Shock Management: Maintain body temperature as close to normal as possible Elevate feet 8-12 inches for most situations (depends on type of injury) CALL EMS!!! AED Automated External Defibrillator Evaluates heart rhythm of a victim of sudden cardiac arrest (patient is not breathing and has no pulse), capable of delivering an electrical charge to the heart To prevent human error, the machine evaluates heart rhythm and decides if employment is appropriate Apply two electrodes to the right apex and the left base of the chest Wait for instructions from the AED- machine will shock if necessary If shock, no pulse- start CPR (30 compressions; 2 breaths)for 2 mins and the AED will deliver another shock If pulse returns, place patient into recovery position Injury Primary Survey Scene Survey LOC Conscious Unconscious Secondary Survey Stabilize Csp LOC, ABCD’s TX Decision CALL EMS, Stay and Stabilize Vitals History SAMPLE/ PQRST Musculoskeletal Evaluation Transport off field or Call EMS Conscious Secondary Survey Vitals- HR, BR, BP, Pupils, Skin (Temp, Color, Condition) History (HOPS- history, observation, palpation, special tests) and SAM- Skeletal, Articular, Musculoskeletal SAMPLE PQRST, Expose and observe site Musculoskeletal Evaluation Focused History #1 Did you hit your head? Do you have any neck pain? Did you lose consciousness? Do you have any numbness or tingling? (bilateral?) Are you having difficulty breathing? If yes to any of these, call for help (AT, physio, EMS) if you don’t know Focused History #2 Chief Complaint (CC) Mechanism of Injury (MOI)/ position of limb at time of injury Type and location of Pain/symptoms Sounds or sensations- snap /crackle/ pop Do you hurt anywhere else? Previous injury (areas involved/ uninvolved) SAMPLE S- Symptoms A- Allergies M- Medications P- Past medical history L- Last meal E- Events prior PQRST P- provokes Q- quality of pain R- radiates S- Severity T- time Observation- SHARP/D S- swelling H-heat A- altered function R- redness P- pain D- deformity Fracture test (SAM- Skeletal) Palpation TOP- tender on palpation Start at either joints above or below Bones, ligaments, joints, muscle Special tests Articular tests- ligament testing (SAM- Articular) Muscle/ strength testing (SAM- musculoskeletal) Any testing specific to joint/ muscle injured Evaluation + Treatment Decision Seriousness of injury Type of first aid and immobilization necessary Does the injury warrant immediate referral to physician for further assessment The manner of transportation from the injury site to the sidelines, training room, or hospital RICE Splinting Unconscious Stabilize CSP/ Spine Complete Primary Survey (ABCD’s) + LOC EMS activation Secondary survey + vitals LOC Evaluate LOC Complete AVPU Verbal- see if they can answer questions from History Painful/ Unconscious= EMS activation Primary Survey Complete ABCD’s Check airway/ breathing Check circulation Check for any deadly bleeds Can have circulation and no breathing but not breathing with no circulation Activate EMS (if haven’t already) Vitals + Secondary Survey Complete a round of vitals- pupils, HR, BR, BP, Skin temp, color and condition Complete Secondary survey while waiting for EMS to arrive Complete another round of vitals to see if anything has changed Vitals are important for establishing condition- ex. shock Deadly Bleeds Hemorrhage- abnormal discharge of blood Can be venous, capillary, arterial, internal or external External Bleeding- open skin wounds- abrasions, incisions, lacerations, avulsions, open fractures Use Direct pressure, elevation and pressure points Deadly Bleeds Direct Pressure- Pressure is directly applied with gloved hand over a sterile gauze pad, apply firmly against resistance of a bone Elevation- elevation part against gravity reduces hydrostatic blood pressure and facilitates venous and lymphatic drainage, which slows bleeding Pressure Points- 11 pts on body help control external bleeding. 2 most commonly used brachial artery (compressed against medial aspect of humerus) for upper limb and femoral artery for lower limb (detected within femoral triangle) Internal Hemorrhaging Invisible to the eye, danger in difficulty of diagnosis due to obscure symptoms Subcutaneous- bruise or contusion Intramuscularly- bruise, contusion, joints Bleeding within a body cavity- skull, thorax, abdomen, is a life and death situation If suspected- monitor vitals closely, especially blood pressure Require hospitalization under complete and constant observation by medical staff All severe hemorrhaging will eventually lead to shock