1 / 24

Crisis Management for Paramedics

Crisis Management for Paramedics. Week 1 Fundamentals of Communication & Therapeutic Approach Concepts of Crisis & Stress. Service. You all stated you want to help people and that you are people persons...so here is your chance to “shine”

jbritt
Download Presentation

Crisis Management for Paramedics

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. Crisis Management for Paramedics Week 1 Fundamentals of Communication & Therapeutic Approach Concepts of Crisis & Stress

  2. Service • You all stated you want to help people and that you are people persons...so here is your chance to “shine” • Patients deserve our best efforts at service – they are the reason we exist • What the “S” in EMS stands for

  3. Effective Communication • External Factors • Look the part of a professional • Pay attention to you appearance • Inspire respect

  4. Consider the following: • How does communication occur? • What are the components of communication • How do we as care givers attempt to communicate with people in crisis and what can hinder the communication

  5. CommunicationTherapeutic Approach What is communication? • The exchange of common symbols • Written, spoken, signing and body language • Basic elements: the sender, the message and the receiver

  6. Verbal Voice quality, diction, pitch, rate of speech and volume • Body language • Provide your undivided attention • LISTEN

  7. Successful communication occurs if, by way of the response, the sender believes that the message was received accurately

  8. Effective listening • An active skill • Requires complete attention • Focus on the messenger • Never finish the other person’s sentence • Do not consider your response until the other person has finished speaking • Requires practice!! **

  9. Remember: A good communicator needs patience and flexibility!

  10. Trust and Rapport • There is a certain amount of trust implied in being a paramedic • You need to earn the trust • First you establish the trust, then the rapport follows. • With good rapport the person you are helping will follow your lead

  11. Developing Rapport • Introduce yourself and your partner • Address the patient formally – Mr., Mrs., etc. • Use the patient’s name ** • Get to the level of the patient • Use a professional but compassionate tone of voice • Explain what you are doing and why

  12. Nonverbal communication skills • Eye contact • Touch and Gentleness • Posture • Demeanour/Smile • Important to look at your patient’s body language

  13. Eye contact • Can be a very powerful source of effective communication • Take your sunglasses off!! • Can be very important in tense or difficult situations • Remember, eye contact means the patient is looking at you!

  14. Compassionate touch • The holding of a hand, touch of an arm or shoulder • May be awkward at first – watch for response • May help to calm the patient • Be careful to touch appropriately – consider the patient’s age, gender, cultural background and current setting

  15. Posture • Gestures, mannerisms and postures by which a person communicates with others • Includes distance between you and the patient, whether you are at eye level or not and your stance

  16. Demeanour & Therapeutic Smile • Pleasant demeanour absolutely necessary when you are dealing with people in crisis – they need to feel safe and assured that you can help • Smile – can send the message that all will be well but consider the crisis

  17. Interviewing Techniques

  18. Questioning • Use open-ended questions • Use closed questions only when necessary • Ask only one question at a time • Listen to the patient’s complete response before asking the next question • Use language the patient can understand • Do not ask leading questions

  19. Payoff Questions • Have you felt like this before? • Have you been upset about anything lately? • Are you afraid of someone? [save this one for the privacy of the ambulance] • Have you been thinking about hurting yourself? • What happened the last time you felt this way?

  20. Strategies to Elicit Useful Responses to Questions • Facilitate the response • Be quiet - never miss a good opportunity to shut up • Clarify the response • Redirect the response • Interpret the response • Simplify and summarize the response

  21. Common Interviewing Errors • Assume Nothing • Giving Medical advice • Providing false hope • Assuming excessive authority • Sidestepping the truth • Distancing yourself from patients as people

  22. Assessing Mental StatusObserving the patient • Appropriate Humour • Timing of Responses to Questions • Memory • Ability to obey simple Commands

  23. Unique interview situations • People who are unmotivated to talk • People who are hostile • People who are very old OR very young • People who live with special challenges • Cross cultural communications • Manners, gestures and body language • Cultural sensitivity and cultural diversity

  24. How does failure to communicate occur? • Prejudice – do not paint all with the same brush • Lack of empathy • Lack of Privacy • External distractions • Internal Distractions

More Related