actually most testers wouldn't care if you swithed as long as you did it at the beginning.
at our practical, they wanted us verbalizing C-Spine considerations before reaching the patient... they failed every applicant who didn't do it.
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actually most testers wouldn't care if you swithed as long as you did it at the beginning.
Ok, first off, everyone put away your cookboo.... err protocols. Sitting here posting links and quoting protocols over which is first, ABC or LOC is about as stupid as having DCAPBTLS as an acronym. As have been mentioned earlier, if you greet a patient and s/he greets you back than the patient's ABC are grossly intact [i.e. the patient has an airway, is breathing, and has a pulse. Millage in those three categories will vary from patient to patient though.] Real life doesn't have purdy little check boxes and just because you verbalize scene safety and BSI doesn't mean a damn, nor that things will stay the same.
In reality, ABC can be assessed long before LOC [oh, our patient is walking around, therefore he probably has an airway [exception: choking, since I know someone is going to call me out on that one B)], the patient is breathing, and the patient has a pulse [if your patient is walking and doesn't have a pulse, then you need a priest, not a medic].
Ok, now let's look at the question itself.
Ok, A and B requires you to check a pulse before they happen. C requires you to check the patient's airway prior to taking that step. D is the only actual assessment up there. "Lying on the floor" is not "unconscious" and we don't maintain airways in patient's who can maintain their own [Law 13*], especially as basics [show me a system that allows basics to RSI and I'll show you a lawsuit waiting to happen].
To expand further, especially if you want to bring "protocols" into this, thing back to good old CPR. What's the first thing you do? Shake and shout. We just call it checking a patient's LOC instead.
Edit: taking C-spine precautions on all patients is stupid, but that's for a different thread.
*Law 13 of the House of God: The delivery of good medical care is to do as much nothing as possible.
Except for page 2, which is mostly comprised of a bunch of posts quoting protocols and how they were taught.
Also, technically speaking, A, B, and C come after ABCs since those are treatments, not assessments.
So, please tell me, how do you treat an airway problem if you haven't assessed a patient's airway (gasp, treatment for A comes after assessment for A)? How do you treat a cardiac problem if you haven't taken a patient's pulse? Do you just assume that an unconscious patient is in arrest and start CPR without checking? Answer those questions, and you will see where I'm, and the question, is coming from.
I mean, unless you have that cool little glove thing from the old TV show Earth 2. If that's the case, how much do you want for it?
In reality, ABC can be assessed long before LOC [oh, our patient is walking around, therefore he probably has an airway [exception: choking, since I know someone is going to call me out on that one B)], the patient is breathing, and the patient has a pulse [if your patient is walking and doesn't have a pulse, then you need a priest, not a medic].
No, I understand that. Of course absence of any of those is the main thing that you are looking for. As far as noisy breathing at 30 feet away, it really depends on the patient [yes, I've had that patient. Fun times in the nursing home...]. Of course if they are having difficultly breathing, they will generally show it. Your hands and ears aren't your only 5 senses. Yes, you can normally tell if a patient is having difficulty breathing/rapid breathing well before you check their LOC. As far as rib fx, I'm sorry, I don't normally think trauma when I see a medical patient. Hear hoof beats, think horses not zebras.JPINFV, after reviewing the posts on this thread, especially the one above, i realized that you may not fully understand the ABC's... the point is not to check if the patient is breathing of if he has a pulse... the point is to make sure that they are adequate to sustain life... if you see the patient is walking around, yes, he has a pulse... but is it 80? is it 130? 180? can you hear noisy breathing from looking 30 feet away? can you see rib fx's under his clothes?
So, you can't see a patient's skin color between entering the room and approaching a patient? You don't see if they're breathing prior to getting right next to them? Where exactly are you looking if not at the patient? Really, an assessment isn't some little check mark box that has to go in order 1, 2, 3, 4, 5.see where i'm going here... you are not considering the reality of what the ABC's are about, or you wouldn't say you could assess them BEFORE even reaching the patient...
As an initial, "I just reached the patient and I don't even know what the patient called us for yet" assessment, yes, ABCs bring grossly intact is what is important.do you really think the ABC's are as dumb as just looking to see if there are breaths or a pulse?
The people who think that an assessment is something where the order is set in stone are doing a great job at that. Same thing with the people who are quoting as ground for some sort of order.i sure hope not... but this is all fodder for the "inadequate education of basics" folk...
at our practical, they wanted us verbalizing C-Spine considerations before reaching the patient... they failed every applicant who didn't do it.
convenient how you failed to mention the pulse... didn't quite fit with your argument?? pretty transparent...
anyhow, your arguments have gotten silly... find someone else..
not at our test. not at others where I was a victim. As long as you held c spine near the beginning, you passed.
Show me a patient that's breathing without a pulse and I'll show you a patient that needs a priest, not a medic.
In reality, ABC can be assessed long before LOC [oh, our patient is walking around, therefore he probably has an airway [exception: choking, since I know someone is going to call me out on that one B)], the patient is breathing, and the patient has a pulse [if your patient is walking and doesn't have a pulse, then you need a priest, not a medic].
actually,
technically, the AVPU is part of the primary assessment, not the scene size-up... don't get that wrong on your exam...