Lecture 5 EMS Response
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Transcript Lecture 5 EMS Response
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PDLS :
EMS Response to Disaster
Prehospital Considerations
Jorge D. Yarzebski, NREMTP
Objectives
To review EMS considerations in disaster
situations and the unique needs of children
What to expect from prehospital providers
Review the Incident Command System (ICS)
and Field Triage as it applies to prehospital
providers
Objectives
Recognize and formally declare a MCI
Communication
- Interagency
- Hospitals
Emergency Medical Services
Network of multiple services and agencies
‘coordinated’ to provide aid and medical care
from 1º response to definitive care based on
training
- First Responder
- Basic
- Intermediate
- Paramedic
- RN’s/MD’s
Coordination
Incident Command System
- Management system created to address
concerns of interagency compatibility and
interaction
- Direct
- Control
- Coordinate
ICS (Incident Command System)
Senior on scene: command
- assess need for further resources and direct
incoming resources to where they are needed
- This starts with first to arrive
- Triage: initial fast assessment of every patient,
sort for evacuation and first in line for care when
additional resources arrive
Responsibilites delegated through ICS
ICS
Scene control
- limit access for civilians
- media cameras
- maintain in/out routes for vehicles which do need
entry
Communications
-
notify hospitals of rough numbers, kinds of
injuries
When YOU are the first to arrive…
Declaring the Multiple Casualty Incident
- Recognize the major incident
- Available resources are insufficient to manage
the number and nature of injuries and
environment
Possibilities
- More than two ambulances required (dependent
on resources)
When YOU are the first to arrive…
- HAZMAT
- Special resources: Fire, Police, rescue with
specialized extrication equipment, SAR, Medivac
Dispatch
- En route request for assistance, confirm upon
arriving on scene or cancel request*
*follow SOP for particular department
EMS ICS
Coordinates EMS activities – Activates MCI
response plan
Supervises
- TRIAGE, TAGGING, TREATMENT,
TRANSPORTATION
Assigns personnel
Guides difficult medical decisions
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First to Arrive
Initial units assumes command
- Senior/most experience takes control
- Requests additional support
- Updates safety/mechanism/conditions
Support
Support
Triage
“to sort” or place in order
Guides decisions about allocating scarce
resources and limited time
“greatest good for greatest number”
Protocol helps make decisions
ICS separates triage from treatment
immediately: see everybody once briefly for
focus
START
Most commonly used triage system across
country
Initial eval –not final
Time limited (plan 1 min/patient)
Categorize and move on
START
“If you can hear me and are able, walk over here”
GREEN triage done – still need individual
evaluation, but can await more staff, allows initial
rescuers to focus on more severely injured people.
Avg 80% of victims will be green, self extricate (may
self transport – eases burden on field but hard on
hospitals)
*Not applicable for under 8 years old*
Kids in triage
Don’t follow commands
May actually hide from rescuers in full gear
(spaceman look)
May be extricated by GREEN parents/ adults
with delay in triage and treatment
Need distraction and dedicated supervisor
able to run after wandering toddlers
JumpSTART (under 8)
Kids more airway dependent – rescue
breaths attempted if pulse present (unlike
adults) Resp 15-40 instead of <30
Vascular system clamps down sooner, so cap
refill less reliable
-
Use peripheral pulse instead
Mental status AV/PU instead of follow/not
JumpSTART
“If you can hear me and you are able, walk
over here for help.”
GREENs are done. Screen GREEN adults
for RED/YELLOW kids carried out.
Assess non-ambulatory patients as you find
them using RPM.
ICS
Treatment: patients may outnumber
transport, leading to time in field where
treatment can be started.
Sort patients by category (greens, yellow,
red, black) and treat within areas. If greens
self triaged, they need evaluation.
Treatment
Limited initial treatment – don’t delay
evacuation if vehicle available
Oxygen, dressings, splints
Airway management? Remember, no
intubations during triage, and no codes
during mass casualty event, unless sufficient
personnel and equipment that no other care
is delayed
Treatment
Kids will be mixed in – do you have enough
supplies in kid size (oxygen, IVs, splints)?
Does your locality stock a “disaster truck”?
Does it have kid size equipment and kid
sized doses of Hazmat antidotes?
Do you have Broselow tapes to guide
dosing?
Treatment - airway
Non breathing child (with pulse): rescue
breaths, then if no response, BLACK
Non breathing child without pulse: BLACK
Oxygen: how administered? Do you have
octopus adaptors to set more than one
NRBM off each nozzle? REDs first.
Treatment
IV fluids? Depends on numbers: does
everyone need an IV? Are there enough IV
kits to give everyone an IV? Use triage to
guide => treat REDs first, then YELLOWs.
Do GREENs need IV?
BLACK/expectant: pain control (if drugs
available) NO IV fluids, NO oxygen
Treatment:
Dressings – rinse gross dirt with sterile fluids or tap
water if available, sterile cover to prevent further
contamination
Pressure dressing for active bleeding
- Recruit neighbor to help hold pressure during triage while
awaiting transport/evacuation
- ARE KIDS CAPABLE OF THIS?
- IS IT APPROPRIATE PSYCHOLOGICALLY?
Splint – extremity injuries
Treatment
Medications: pain control, specific antidotes
with Hazmat event/team
Monitoring: repeat assessment after triage,
re-categorize if necessary (to worse, never
better – even if they respond to treatment,
they have the same underlying injury)
ICS
Transport: decides which patients leave
scene first and where they’re going
- Remember that helpful bystanders and self
transporters will fill nearest hospital first
- Includes decisions about longer transport times
for specialty care ( e.g. out of town for burn unit
straight from scene rather than to hospital for
transfer)
- PEDIATRIC SPECIALTY CENTERS
Communication
Telephones
Cellular Phones
Pager System
Radios
Whistles
Loudspeakers/Megaphones
Your Pedi First in Bag
Is your ambulance equipped to handle a
Pediatric MCI?
What is essential to your first in bag?
- Airway supplies
- Dressings
- Tags
Do we include Broselow tapes to guide
dosing?
Ambulance / Disaster Preparedness
Top to bottom
BLS / ALS specific
Pre-determined scope of practice rules
Policy formulation
Incident specific arrangements
Sectioning shell - age specific
Supplies:
Oral pharyngeal
airways
Bag Valve Mask’s
O2 / delivery devices
Pulse oximeter
P.O. ear probes
CO2 monitors
Trauma scissors
Stethoscopes
Blood pressure cuffs
Cervical collars
Portable suction
Padded board splints
Obstetrics kit
Blankets
Sheets
Supplies
Car seats
Needles
Toys
Sharps containers
Airway rolls
Glucometer
O2 multiplexer
I.O. needles
Naso-gastric tubes
Broselow Tape
Chest tubes
Adhesive tape
Nebulizers
Medications
I.V. solutions
Clean water / cups
Supplies
Formula
Ground clothes
Purifier / preservative
Paper / waterproof
pens
hand lights with
batteries
Disaster Tags
Light sticks
Disposable bags
Candles / waterproof
Chlorine bleach
matches
Rain tarps/ poles
Soap / towels
Hand tools
Supplies
Radio CB/am/fm
Trauma dressings
Whistle
Gauze
Meals Ready to Eat
Hydrogen peroxide
Bandage
Alcohol
Triangular bandage
Cold / hot packs
Kling
Gloves
Aluminum foil
Instaglucose
Vaseline gauze
Sterile water /
saline
Supplies
Backboards/ straps
Optional / Monitors defibrillators
AED / SAED
Other regional specific adjuncts
Supplies
Expanded practice
Special needs
Thank you