1 / 25

Mass Casualty Incidents

Mass Casualty Incidents. What constitutes an MCI?. More than one patient and system resources are taxed at the time Anytime there are more Patients than Rescuers. The Goal of all Responders Should be to “Save as Many Lives as Possible”. The Basics.

kdansby
Download Presentation

Mass Casualty Incidents

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. Mass Casualty Incidents

  2. What constitutes an MCI? • More than one patient and system resources are taxed at the time • Anytime there are more Patients than Rescuers

  3. The Goal of all Responders Should be to “Save as Many Lives as Possible”

  4. The Basics • Your first 5 minutes will determine how the incident will go: Emotions are Contagious • Think Incident Command • Think Triage • Pre-plan and train or you will fail

  5. Incident Command • First person on scene sends an Initial On Scene Report • See as much as the scene as you can in 30 seconds • Process what you see and hear • THINK - Don’t Panic • Paint an accurate picture of the scene with your brief report • Declare yourself the IC, Where the IC Post will be and where responding units should report to

  6. Triage - “To sort by priority” • Hard to do for the inexperienced, but it is really very easy • All responders must know what the goal is…….. • Sometimes most severely injured patient does not get treated and dies

  7. How to Triage using the Tags • Conduct an Initial Walkthrough • Tag Patients as Red, Yellow, Green or Blue • Remember - Triage is constantly conducted so don’t panic with your first tag

  8. Severely injured but able to be saved with relatively quick treatment and transport Examples: Severe bleeding, Severe Shock, Open Chest or Abdominal Wounds, Unconscious but has pulse and is breathing, Several Major Fractures Emotionally Out Of Control - (Emotions are Contagious) Injured Rescuers - For Morale of other Rescuers RED - IMMEDIATE

  9. Yellow - Delayed • Injured but unable to walk on their own • These people will be treated! • Don’t over tag people because of bystanders or age (children) • Examples: • severe burns but no respiratory distress, • spinal injuries • moderate blood loss • conscious with head injuries

  10. Green - Walking Wounded or Mortal Wounds • Minor injures that need to be assessed or treated but not right away. • Ex: Minor fractures, minor bleeding • Some systems use the green tag for obviously mortal wounds where death appears reasonably certain • (these patients can be retriaged later if personnel and/or resources become available) • Have a Refusal Log handy and use it

  11. Blue/Black - Obviously Dead • Some systems include Dead or Obviously Dying • Depends on local protocols • Examples: • cardiac arrest • respiratory arrest but has pulse • etc.

  12. Treatment • Once Triage is done, move patients to the proper treatment area • Use tarps, cones, flags, to mark areas • Control access to areas • Constantly re-triage

  13. Transportation • Ambulances report to staging area • Transportation Officer assigns patients to ambulances • Broadcast the “All Immediates Transported”

  14. Management of the Deceased • If it is a crime scene, leave the bodies where they are • Cover the victim with a white sheet if possible • If the bodies can be seen by the surviving patients, consider moving them

  15. Designate a Temporary Morgue Area • Should be out of site from bystanders and victims • Maintain Access Control • loved ones • media • thieves

  16. Handling the Dead • Show respect and dignity • Reduce the pain that witnesses may feel (they will watch) • Package them as if they were still alive

  17. Body Bags • Always choose white instead of black if possible • white is pure and is associated with patients • black resembles a trash bag • Inner plastic lining that can stay intact for viewing

  18. Carrying the Dead • It is virtually impossible to carry the bag without support • Always use a backboard or better yet,a scoop stretcher

  19. Double Glove and Tape Wrists of Personnel Use shovels and not hands to pick up body parts Cover the body or at least the head before picking it up Use Vicks VapoRub under a mask when necessary Scoop Stretchers when possible Secure the body to the backboard well so that it does not move Volunteers only ! Emotional Distancing Techniques

  20. Summary - Top Ten 1. First On Scene Report 2. Escalated Response 3. Think Incident Command 4. Triage 5. Treat by Priority

  21. Summary - Top Ten 6. Separate victims by priority 7. Transport by priority 8. Re-Triage Constantly 9. Only move the dead when it is effecting patient care 10. Train, Train, Train and Practice

More Related