I went to school with that guy! Great to see him continuing with practice!
@ering963 жыл бұрын
very informative! phenomenal work team 👏👏👏
@ragemage11263 жыл бұрын
Love the structure of your scenario! It’s very easy to follow with the side notes. Will there be a trauma assessment coming? 🤕🚑
@MarishelyRodriguez Жыл бұрын
Thoy
@ddahstan68762 жыл бұрын
Great team!
@diggydowdiggydow3 жыл бұрын
Do you really not take blood glucose if Pt is alert/oriented? I'd take it automatically if Pt is diabetic.
@CoastWildernessMedicalTraining3 жыл бұрын
If there is any indication of alteration to mental status, I would agree with you - and I don't limit that to clinical findings of disorientation, or decreased GCS. If, for example, I have a patient whose family states that they are acting 'off,' I am probably going to include a blood glucose check in my assessment, even if they can answer my questions accurately. (Trust the people who know your patient!) Incidentally, in that case, I am probably going to do a BGL even the patient isn't diagnosed as diabetic - if I am investigating altered mental status, its a pertinent part of my assessment. However, if they are alert, oriented and acting normally, its difficult to see what I would be looking for with that blood glucose check. It isn't a comfortable thing to have done, and while the risks of an infection are very low, they do exist, especially in certain populations.
@diggydowdiggydow3 жыл бұрын
@@CoastWildernessMedicalTraining Thank you! Makes sense.
@christopherkoch41287 ай бұрын
You get numbers in your secondary assessment. Not the primary; you treat what you are seeing per protocol
@christopherkoch41287 ай бұрын
A pulse ox only confirms what you're seeing. Do not rely on a pulse ox in your primary assessment. Remember, a patient may sat at 98% on room air, but is the patient working hard to breathe? Based on the scenario, it's appropriate, but when it comes to a fire scene, you cannot rely on a pulse ox for saturation. Overall, you should not be getting numbers in your primary assessment if you're a good practitioner in the pre-hospital field. I rest my case 😤
@CoastWildernessMedicalTraining7 ай бұрын
Thanks for your comments, Christopher. The structure portrayed in this video is consistent with that expected by the EMR licensing body here in British Columbia. I am not sure exactly what your complaint is around the use of pulse oximetry at this point in the call, but it is not examined until after ABCs have been verified. We certainly don't teach anyone to rely exclusively on the pulse oximeter when determining oxygen needs, but in this case, where there is no increased work of breathing, history of inhalation injury, and no injuries consistent with or other indications of shock, applying O2 based on pulse oximetry is entirely appropriate, and helps to target the right amount of oxygen to administer to achieve a target SpO2 greater than 99%. I appreciate your observation that at a fire scene, where there is a risk of CO poisoning or other inhalation injury, the SpO2 isn't a reliable indicator but... this scenario doesn't take place at a fire scene, so I'm not sure the criticism is relevant. A good idea for a future video, though!