1 / 34

Emergency Plans Lecture 5

Emergency Plans Lecture 5. Emergency Action Plans. Emergency personnel (team) Team physician, therapist, coach , student therapists , local EMS This team will provide 1) immediate care of athlete, 2) equipment retrieval , 3) activation of EMS, 4) directing EMS to scene

keaira
Download Presentation

Emergency Plans Lecture 5

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 PlansLecture 5

  2. Emergency Action Plans • Emergency personnel (team) • Team physician, therapist, coach , student therapists , local EMS • This team will provide 1) immediate care of athlete, 2) equipment retrieval , 3) activation of EMS, 4) directing EMS to scene • Emergency communication • Plan must be written out , procedure for home and away must be outlined , plan must include location of phones directions to contest site, access points for the facility • Emergency equipment • Stretches, spine boards, splints etc

  3. Emergency Procedures serious injuries may be frightening, particularly when breathing or circulation is impaired as first person on the scene , you must evaluate the situation , assess the extent and seriousness other injury and recognize life threatening conditions , and then provide the immediate emergency care although there are few sport related injuries of this seriousness but they do occur so one must be prepared

  4. Reasons to activate EMS Loss of consciousness Suspected cervical injury Unresponsiveness Need to establish an airway Performance of Recue breathing Performance of CPR Major bleeding Any obvious or suspected fracture

  5. Emergency Situations conditions or injuries that impair or have the potential to impair breathing and circulation primary / initial survey – determines responsiveness , recognizes and identifies immediate life threatening situations ABC’S secondary survey – involves a more hands on , detailed assessment from head to toe, looking for other non life threatening injuries

  6. Responsiveness • Before making any decisions about rendering care it is essential that their level of responsiveness be determined. • AVPU • A –Alert and aware • V- responds to verbal stimulus • P- responds to Painful stimulus • U – Unresponsive to any stimulus

  7. Alert and aware – name , location time etc • Verbal – do they respond to verbal communication • Painful – do they respond to painful stimulus , (pinching the skin , thumbnails etc) response would be facial gestures , movement of limb away from pain • Unresponsive – if athlete fails to show any response to above they are said to be unresponsive.

  8. Airway Assessment Assess athlete breathing in position found ( look listen and feel) If not breathing try jaw thrust, if that does not work use the head tilt chin lift Remember to check for foreign objects , do not sweep , if you can see it then try to get out .

  9. Partial airway obstruction • there is still some air exchange and individual will be able to cough • will typically grasp the throat ( universal distress sign ) • do not interfere • stand by and encourage them to continue coughing in attempt to dislodge obstruction • an ineffective cough or high pitched noise during breathing should be treated as a total airway obstruction

  10. Total Airway Obstruction • no air passing through, individual unable to speak , breath or cough • must react quickly to clear airway , and stimulate breathing • Abdominal thrusts if standing or chest thrusts if lying down

  11. Cardiopulmonary Emergencies • cardiac arrest, determine if there is a heartbeat… if not begin CPR.. AED’s • S/S • pain in the chest , radiating to both arms (usually left) into neck , jaw or teeth, upper back or superior middle abdomen • shortness of breath , nausea, feeling of impending doom • medical emergency activate EMS

  12. Unconscious Athlete • head injuries leading cause of unconsciousness in sports • level of consciousness may very depending on responses of individual to verbal and sensory stimuli • unconsciousness identifies an individual who lacks conscious awareness and is unable to respond to stimuli • different methods of stimuli – pinching triceps, rubbing knuckles on sternum • if unconscious – check ABC’s and call ambulance

  13. Bleeding • severe bleeding will cause a loss in blood volume and decrease blood pressure • this results in increased work load on the heart (rapid weak pulse) • arterial bleeding – bright red , usually spurting • venous bleeding – dark blueish – red – steady flow

  14. best controlled with direct pressure over the wound • elevate above the heart Internal bleeding • usually the result of a blunt trauma, can lead to shock if overlooked • s/s – abdominal rigidity, Nausea, discomfort • emergency situation activate EMS

  15. Fractures • is a break in the continuity of the bone and is classified as open or closed, depending on if the skin is broken or not. • obviously open fractures are worse because the risk of infection • swelling , bruising , deformities, shortening of limb, guarding , point tenderness , grating or crepitus • Ice and Immobilize , minor refer to physician for x-rays , displace or more severe fractures activate EMS

  16. Splinting & Immobilization • suspected #’s need to be splinted before a person is moved • most organized sports settings should be prepared with commercial splints, but outdoor pursuits rarely bring splinting material --> make shift splints have to work

  17. Shock • shock can occur with any injury, serious or non serious • shock is an acute life threatening condition that involves the body’s failure to maintain adequate circulation to the vital organs ( hypovolemic) • rapid weak pulse, breathing rapid and shallow • anxiety, disorientation , cold clammy moist skin, profuse sweating and extreme thirst • Activate EMS

  18. Shock

  19. Treatment of Shock • control any major bleeding and splint fractures • if no head or neck injury is suspected – elevate feet 8 to 12 inches • if individual vomits – place on side to avoid blocking the airway • maintain body heat –remove wet clothing if possible – cover with blanket • do not give individual anything by mouth • monitor vital signs • Activate EAP

  20. Shock • Anaphylactic shock • A sever reaction to a stimulus (allergen) such as a bee sting , medication or food • Must activate EMS immediately

  21. Anaphylactic shock

  22. Secondary Survey • Obtain an accurate history SAMPLE • S- signs and symptoms • A- Allergies • M – medications • P- pertinent past history • L – Last meal ( food & water) • E – events leading up to the injury

  23. Secondary survey • Visually inspect • Pupils ( PEARL) • Mouth , nose , neck • Palpate body from Head to Toe ( look for bruising , swelling deformities)

More Related