Hi Guys, I recently found this forum and I've been learning a lot from your experiences in the field. I'm a fairly new EMR (3 years) at an manufacturing company. We aren't dedicated providers but are occasionally paged to act as first responders to handle the little things or provide BLS support until EMTs can arrive for the more serious issues. The response time is usually pretty quick for the ambulance to arrive so we only have a couple of minutes or less with the patient, just enough to begin doing the OPQRST and SAMPLEs. The thing I was wondering about was what information should be passed on by us EMRs to the EMTs? If the patient is A&Ox4, wouldn't the histories and stuff be better told directly to the EMTs by the patient? It feels really akward to list all that out to the responders if the patient is sitting right there. Certainly initial vitals should be passed on but would you rather hear the rest from us or the patient? Thanks.
I work as an EMT on an industrial fire brigade and we frequently do handovers to the county paramedics (I'm also a paramedic with them). We care less about the patient's name/age/etc than we do about your findings.
As far as history/meds/allergies, I just want big tickets. For example, "he had a heart attack a month ago," is big ticket. "He has GERD," not a big ticket. "He is allergic to amoxicillin," is little ticket, while, "he is allergic to aspirin," is big ticket.
In order to get good at it, you should do SOAP or SBAR; pick one and have everybody train on it. Practice, practice, practice!
SOAP for a Medical:
Subjective - 47 year old male with "chest pressure" rated 7 of 10
Objective - Located substernal, not reproducible with palpation, moves down left arm, sweating like you wouldn't believe.
Assessment - P50, BP92/54, RR16, lung sounds clear and equal bilaterally.
Plan - O2 via NC @ 4L/min, 324mg ASA PO.
SOAP for a Trauma:
Subjective - 51 year old female, right hand crushed in press
Objective - Obvious Fx to right index/middle/ring fingers, trapped in press for <1 minute, Takes 81mg ASA each day, GCS15, denies loss of consciousness
Assessment - Good radial pulses, bleeding controlled w/ gauze, no apparent Fx to palm/wrist
Plan - wrapped hand for bleeding, arm placed in splint for good measure, ice pack applied
We like quick, to the point reports!
We previously carried tiny notebooks on our persons which had a mini-Patient Care Report on each page, with just enough room for the pertinent info. If you write this stuff down for the paramedics they will love you forever always.
If you guys need like a sample form, send me a PM and I'll see what I can do (perhaps even send you one if I can find it).