nymedic9999
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Hi all I have a little scenario I want to run by you guys. For the sake of the scenario assume you are on a BLS rig with a ALS fly car available. How would you handle this call? AND NO ITS NOT HOMEWORK
MOI- The patient was the passenger in a vehicle when it was t-boned on the passenger side probably at around 40 mph. About 4 inches intrusion to the passenger side. Passenger was restrained and no airbag deployment. No other injuries in vehicle.
So you get dispatched for the mva with entrapment and no injuries. You arrive on-scene to find a 80 year old male trapped in his vehicle due to his door being jammed. The patient initially only complains of neck pain and is extricated with Collar and LBB following fire taking the door off. Patient is loaded into the ambulance and vitals are taken. Patient is hemodynamically stable. SPo2 is slightly low at 90 so patient is placed on a nasal canula at 2 lpm. This bumps his spo2 up to 98. Full head to toe is conducted and no complaints are noted. About 20 minutes out from the hospital thought the patient begins to complain of pain in his lower right chest over his lower ribs. The pain is reproducible upon palpation and is believed to have been caused by the seatbelt/impact(impact was on the patients right side). My question is as a basic truck would you continue on to the hospital or call for an ALS intercept due to his original low spo2 and the possibility of a underlying chest injury?
MOI- The patient was the passenger in a vehicle when it was t-boned on the passenger side probably at around 40 mph. About 4 inches intrusion to the passenger side. Passenger was restrained and no airbag deployment. No other injuries in vehicle.
So you get dispatched for the mva with entrapment and no injuries. You arrive on-scene to find a 80 year old male trapped in his vehicle due to his door being jammed. The patient initially only complains of neck pain and is extricated with Collar and LBB following fire taking the door off. Patient is loaded into the ambulance and vitals are taken. Patient is hemodynamically stable. SPo2 is slightly low at 90 so patient is placed on a nasal canula at 2 lpm. This bumps his spo2 up to 98. Full head to toe is conducted and no complaints are noted. About 20 minutes out from the hospital thought the patient begins to complain of pain in his lower right chest over his lower ribs. The pain is reproducible upon palpation and is believed to have been caused by the seatbelt/impact(impact was on the patients right side). My question is as a basic truck would you continue on to the hospital or call for an ALS intercept due to his original low spo2 and the possibility of a underlying chest injury?