1 / 12

EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS AND ASSESSMENT

EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS AND ASSESSMENT. CHAPTER 9. EMERGENCIES ARE INEVITABLE. Gathering Information: Conscious victim: talk to the patient Assess vital signs Observation: Primary and Secondary Survey. ASSESSMENT. LOOK LISTEN TOUCH SMELL. EMERGENCY ACTION PLAN (EAP).

elita
Download Presentation

EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS AND ASSESSMENT

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. EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS AND ASSESSMENT CHAPTER 9

  2. EMERGENCIES ARE INEVITABLE • Gathering Information: • Conscious victim: talk to the patient • Assess vital signs • Observation: Primary and Secondary Survey

  3. ASSESSMENT • LOOK • LISTEN • TOUCH • SMELL

  4. EMERGENCY ACTION PLAN (EAP) • Duty of athletic trainer to implement EAP • Practice until procedures can be performed confidently without confusion • Page 213-214 – EAP Guidelines

  5. EMERGENCY ACTION PLAN (EAP) • Emergency Medical Services (EMS) phone calls: • Stay calm • Severity of injury • First aid being provided • Address and location • Where you will meet EMS team

  6. IMPLEMENTING EMERGENCY PROCEDURES • Stay in control and do not panic! • Perform first aid until someone with higher qualifications arrives • Universal precaution: Wearing gloves will be included in all prodecures • contact sports = higher chance of exposure to blood

  7. PRIMARY SURVEY *Definition: Examining the patient to determine the presence of life-threatening situations. • Determine level of consciousness • If alert and oriented, proceed to secondary survey • If nonresponsive/unconscious begin primary survey Primary Survey: ABC! • A = Airway • B = Breathing • C = Circulation

  8. PRIMARY SURVEY • Airway • Head-tilt/chin-lift • If airway is not clear: • Open jaw with thumb and index finger • Do a finger sweep with index finger to remove any objects • Make an airway using head-tilt/chin-lift • Breathing • Look, listen, feel • If not breathing: • Call for help • Clear the airway • Begin rescue breathing

  9. PRIMARY SURVEY • Circulation • Check for breathing and pulse • If no signs of circulation: • Perform CPR • If Victim is face down: • Don’t turn them over if they show signs of breathing and circulation • If not, perform a log roll • See page 302-303 • Practice!

  10. SECONDARY SURVEY *Definition: head-to-toe assessment to determine the extent of illness or injury; locating any injuries other than those found in the primary survey • Information gathered is used to determine appropriate treatment and if you should call 911 • Keep the athlete calm and warm, monitor vital signs

  11. H.O.P.S. • History • Observation • Palpation • Stress tests Purpose: careful injury assessment that ensures that no injury is made worse by the process. • Least invasive methods of gathering information slowly progress to manipulation if necessary

  12. H.O.P.S. • History • How did this injury happen? • Observation • Is there swelling, bleeding, etc? • Palpation • Ask the athlete where it hurts. Feel for spasms, pulses, breaks in the skin, etc. • Stress tests • Check for active range of motion and then the passive range of motion

More Related