I need the power of the panel here...Alert and oriented times FOUR?

mycrofft

Still crazy but elsewhere
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A new supervisor insists this is the "new" way to do it. Google comes up with ONE hit on the Internet. Suggestijons for the fourth orientation in this setting so far by staff members have included the following:
1. Medical insurance carrier.
2. Smell ("Is this a flower, or an ammonia inhaler?".
3. Credit balance for their commissary account.
4. Falling ("OOPS!" crash).;)(
 

akflightmedic

Forum Deputy Chief
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The "new" way...that is funny.

It has been A/O x4 for many years now.

Alert to person, place, time and situation.

Anyone else teaching or hear anything different?
 

KEVD18

Forum Deputy Chief
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person, place, time and event(situation)
 

Scout

Para-Noid
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I dont use a/ox2 we have

AVPU; alert, responds to voice, pain, nothing

And GCS 0-15
 

Airwaygoddess

Forum Deputy Chief
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Same here in my neck of the woods, person, place, time and event along with AVPU and GCS ;)
 

Code 3

Forum Captain
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The "new" way...that is funny.

It has been A/O x4 for many years now.

Alert to person, place, time and situation.

Anyone else teaching or hear anything different?

The 4th element is briefly mentioned in class, however the agencies in my area only use A/Ox3 (person, place, time). If you need/want to document the event(s) leading to the incident you can do so in your SAMPLE and state whether or not the pt was aware.
 

KEVD18

Forum Deputy Chief
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the problem becomes one of local custom. in one area, caox3 is perfect and in another its deficient.

yet another reason why every emt needs to be taught the same standards.
 

41 Duck

Forum Lieutenant
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GCS is 3-15, way I learned it, and CAOx4= person, place, time, and event.




Later!

--Coop
 

MSDeltaFlt

RRT/NRP
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The 4th element is briefly mentioned in class, however the agencies in my area only use A/Ox3 (person, place, time). If you need/want to document the event(s) leading to the incident you can do so in your SAMPLE and state whether or not the pt was aware.

Well, here's the deal. If you're C-A-O x 4, then you know "who" you are, "where" you are, "when" you are and "why" you are. You can be C-A-O x 3 and have amnesia of events which should set off red flags on your assessment as far as neuro goes.
 

akflightmedic

Forum Deputy Chief
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I dont use a/ox2 we have

AVPU; alert, responds to voice, pain, nothing

And GCS 0-15

No such thing as a "0" GCS.

The lowest possible GCS is 3.

You can not use AVPU by itself if the patient is an "A, V or P". You then have to further document how much of an "A, V or P" they are.

You could potentially rouse a patient with painful stimuli who is then able to answer some of the A/Ox 4 questions.

The only patient you could get away with using only AVPU on is the Unresponsive patient and that is provided they never become responsive during your care.
 

Tincanfireman

Airfield Operations
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I have used CAO x 4 for years, but there are some who prefer the x3 variant. Either way, documentation is your friend.
 

Epi-do

I see dead people
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We use A&Ox3 around here, although I was taught A&Ox4 a long, long time ago in basic class.
 

EMT007

Forum Lieutenant
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^ yeah, when I learned it, we were told that A&Ox4 was the old way of doing it and that the current standard was A&Ox4. I still hear some of the older medics using x4, but everyone else (including ER staff) uses x3
 

BossyCow

Forum Deputy Chief
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I use A&Ox4.. because I've had patients who knew who they were, where they were and when they were, but had no memory of what happened to them.
 

BossyCow

Forum Deputy Chief
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No primarily in the elderly.. after a TIA with no memory of the event.. or short term memory loss after a stroke. I even had one elderly lady found on the floor of her bathroom by her husband.. with no memory of how she go there. turns out her's was a UTI with a high fever.
 
OP
OP
mycrofft

mycrofft

Still crazy but elsewhere
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I've trolled around, no pun intended

Psych uses much more than four!
Recent amnesia is not uncommon in traumatic events! Closed head injury is suspect, but most folks can't remember at once what happened even without closed head injury. (I never ask someone if they lost consciousness, I ask if they remember waking up. They get the darndest look on their faces!).

Thanks. I have other funny LOC tales, but in our Booking area "situation" seems to be consonant with "place".
Ask me about the drunk near the Nebraska state capitol sometime.;)
 
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