1 / 28

Basic First Aid Guidelines and Principles

Basic First Aid Guidelines and Principles. Terry Slattery, ATC Instructor/Head Athletic Trainer Theodore Roosevelt High School ke_tslattery@kentschools.net. Overview. Emergency Action Steps Emergency Action Plans Recognizing and Responding to an Emergency

carol-yates
Download Presentation

Basic First Aid Guidelines and Principles

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Basic First Aid Guidelines and Principles Terry Slattery, ATC Instructor/Head Athletic Trainer Theodore Roosevelt High School ke_tslattery@kentschools.net

  2. Overview • Emergency Action Steps • Emergency Action Plans • Recognizing and Responding to an Emergency • Prevention of Disease Transmission • Basic First Aid Skills

  3. Emergency Action Steps In any emergency or non-emergency situation, always follow the three Emergency Action Steps to help minimize the confusion and provide a structure for appropriate care • CHECK • CALL • CARE

  4. CHECK the scene: Is it safe? What happened? How many people are involved? Is there immediate danger involved? Is anyone else available to help? CHECK for life-threatening conditions, such as: Unconsciousness No breathing or trouble breathing No signs of life (breathing or movement) Severe bleeding Emergency Action Steps - CHECK • CHECK the scene for safety • CHECK the ill or injured person

  5. Land Line Land line: Directly to local EMS dispatch Displays address to EMS Phone location and access Know how to access outside line Best option to use Cell Phone Cell phone: Directly to least busy cell tower Answered by State Highway Patrol Transferred to local EMS Slight delay Emergency Action Steps - CALL • CALL 9-1-1 or local emergency number • When in doubt….CALL for help! Calling for help is something anyone can do

  6. EMS Dispatch Information Location? Telephone #? Caller’s name? What happened? How many victims? Victim(s) condition? Help being given? Answer dispatcher questions clearly and concisely as possible Emergency Action Steps - CALL

  7. Emergency Action Steps - CALL Notes: • Do not hang up first. Let EMS dispatcher tell you when or leave phone off hook • Never assume 911 has been called • Assign bystanders clear directions • AED, First Aid supplies • Meet EMS • Retrieve forms/info • Alert parents, admin, supervisor, etc • Crowd/scene control

  8. Emergency Action Steps - CALL • When to call 9-1-1 for an Adult (>12-yrs old): Incomplete listing • Unconscious • Trouble breathing or breathing in a strange way • Not breathing • No signs of circulation • Persistent chest pain • Severe bleeding that does not stop • Deep burn to face and neck • Pressure or pain in the abdomen that does not go away • Vomiting blood or passing blood • Multiple seizures or seizures that last longer than 5 minutes • Possible head, neck or back injuries • Apparent poisoning • Broken bone with obvious deformity or broken thru skin • Sudden severe headache or slurred speech

  9. Emergency Action Steps - CALL • When to call 9-1-1 for a Child or Infant (<12-yrs old) • Sudden silence • No breathing • Difficulty breathing • No signs of circulation • Non-responsive to stimuli • Upper torso deep burn • Apparent poisoning • Call 9-1-1 if • Fire or explosion • Downed electrical lines • Presence of poisonous gas • Swiftly moving or rapidly rising water • Motor vehicle accidents • Persons who cannot be easily moved

  10. Emergency Action Steps - CARE • Care for the ill or injured person • Do no further harm…do not move unless absolutely needed • Act as a “reasonable, prudent, person” to the best of your ability or training level • Good Samaritan Law • Obtain consent to help if conscious • Know expectations of your contract vs volunteer • Monitor the “ABCs” – Airway, Breathing and Circulation • Protect yourself and others • Follow universal precautions (gloves,barriers,hand washing, etc.) • OHSA Standards • For copy of OSHA Bloodborne Pathogens Standard (CFR 1910.1030) see link: http://www.osha.gov/SLTC/etools/hospital/hazards/bbp/bbp.html

  11. A little education goes a long way! CPR or UPS video clip here Time for a 10 minute break!

  12. Emergency Action Plan (EAP) • Must be structured, yet flexible enough to be easily followed • Posted • Practiced • Practical • OSHA resources • http://www.osha.gov/SLTC/etools/evacuation/index.html • http://www.osha.gov/SLTC/etools/evacuation/docs/eap_checklist.pdf

  13. Emergency Action Plan (EAP) • Examples • Roosevelt Athletics (Athletic Health Care) • Theodore Roosevelt High School • Kent City Schools • Transportation Services??

  14. Basic First Aid Skills • Checking an Ill or Injured Person • Conscious vs Unconscious • Adult vs Child or Infant • Head to Toe Assessment • Give Care

  15. Basic First Aid Skills • Recognizing and Caring for Shock • Decrease of oxygenated blood to the vital organs of the body • Signals of Shock • Restlessness/irritability • Altered level of consciousness • Nausea or vomiting • Rapid breathing and pulse • Pale or ashen, cool, moist skin • Excessive thirst • Care for Shock • 9-1-1 • Elevate legs 8-12” if no head, neck, back injury • Maintain body temperature • Do not give anything to eat or drink

  16. Basic First Aid Skills • Soft Tissue Injuries • Closed Wounds = PRICE = Protection, Rest, Ice, Compression, Elevation • Contusions = bruise, protect • Internal bleeding = vomit/pass blood, tender abdomen, EMS • Open Wounds = Stop bleeding, sterile dressing, bandage, protect • Abrasion = clean, staph/MRSA issues • Laceration = stitches or not? • Avulsion = preserve avulsed area and transport with victim • Puncture = do not remove item, easily infected

  17. Basic First Aid Skills • Bleeding and Wound Care • Use a protective barrier (Universal Precautions) • To stop/slow external bleeding • Direct pressure • Elevation • Pressure point • Tourniquet (last resort) • Wash/irrigate/clean wound if possible • Cover wound with dressing and bandage • Refer for proper medical care

  18. Basic First Aid Skills • Burns • Can damage one or more layers of skin, fat, muscle, bone • 1st degree = superficial, red skin • 2nd degree = blisters • 3rd degree = charred, black, deep • Burn type and tx options • Heat = cool area with cold water, cover loosely with sterile dressing • Chemical = flush with cool water • Electrical = turn off power source, cover with sterile dressing, refer • Radiation (sun) = remove from source, cool, cover lightly • Lightning • Have a warning plan • Do not rely on “flash-to-bang” method

  19. Basic First Aid Skills • Bone and Joint Injuries • Fracture • Obvious deformity = splint/keep in position found in, do not straighten • No obvious deformity = error on side of caution, movement means nothing • Open vs. Closed = thru skin or not • Dislocation = completely out of joint, do not reduce, support • Subluxation = popped out and then back in, support • Sprain = stretch of ligament, PRICE, Dr. referral • Strain = stretch of muscle/tendon, PRICE, Dr. referral

  20. Basic First Aid Skills • Head, Neck and Back Injuries: • Always suspect there is head, neck, back injury • Numbness or tingling in both arms or legs • Partial or complete loss of strength and movement • Care for: • Call EMS • Do not move • Stabilize head/neck in position found • Monitor ABCs

  21. Basic First Aid Skills • Heat-Related Emergencies • Heat Cramps = muscle spasm, dehydration, fluids • Heat Exhaustion = cool, moist, pale skin, disoriented, electrolytes • Heat Stroke = red, hot, dry skin, Medical Emergency • Cold-Related Emergencies • Hypothermia = body temp, apathy, weakness, warm body • Frostbite = freezing of tissue cells, gradual warm, do not rub

  22. Basic First Aid Skills • Sudden Illnesses • Fainting = treat for shock, quick recovery • Diabetic Emergency = hyper/hypo, tx as directed, glucagon pen, fast absorbing sugar • Seizure = do not resist, protect head, let run course, slow recovery, EMS if first one or >5 min. • Stroke = F.A.S.T. = Face, Arm, Speech, Time • Poisoning = 800-222-1222, collect bottle/substance • Allergic Reactions = Epi-pen, benydryl, EMS, ice • Asthma = inhaler, EMS

  23. Basic First Aid Skills • Splinting • Splint in position found • Immobilize the joint above and below injury • Check distal circulation • Anatomic splints = affix to another body part • Soft splints = pillow, folded blanket, sling • Rigid splints = vacuum, air, board, metal

  24. Basic First Aid Skills • Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation (CPR) • Function is to sustain circulation to vital organs • New CPR standards (2006) • Simplified to be less intimidating to learn and/or perform • No pulse check • 30:2 compression/ventilation rate for Adult, Child, Infant (15:2 old) • See chart for specifics

  25. Basic First Aid Skills • Automated External Defibrillator (AED) • Device that analyzes the hearts electrical rhythm • Sudden Cardiac Arrest vs Standard Heart Attack (MI) • Public access = early defibrillation = > saves • 10% < chance of survival for every minute of not breathing, no circulation • Precautions • Electrical conductors: water, metal, touch, etc. • Most pads specific to adults (55 lbs/8 yrs/3rd grade) • Easy to use • Open lid and follow directions • Becoming “Expected Standard of Care” in public facilities • If have AED must have policy/procedure/training protocols

  26. Check – Call - Care Common Sense Rules Call 9-1-1 if any doubt If you think it is wrong it probably is! Document everything you do! Follow your gut instinct! Act as a reasonable prudent person to the best of your training level If conscious and breathing…do not move!

More Related