Agreed
I will agree that going round performing the Black and Deckerotomy on people who are stable is inappropriate.
On the other hand if you have a shut down, severely sick patient who is unable to produce something viable to stick even a 20g into then I don't mind IOing them.
To paraphrase the great Frank Archer, does it mean we drill an IO into somebody because they need a bit of fluid or some morph and we can't be buggered to slip a drip into them? No.
It's an absolute contraindication here
Thats what we have ketamine for ... do hand me that pack of D5
We're talking from the same page me thinks. Sick pts, typically unconscious though not necessarily so, shut down, kids or the very old with those awful spidery veins that look like a relief map of the LA motorways. The last pt I IO'd had a gross head injury, needed to be RSI'd but as luck would have it had been bowled over carrying, you guessed it paint - skin coloured paint which happily applied itself to both her arms and torso. Anyway with not a vein in sitght it was bi-lateral tibial IO's - the first failed, the second OK. the last time I looked in ED a surgical reg was busily pumping fluids through the remaining IO line. A good option to have in a pinch.
We don't have ketamine in widespread use here as yet, morph, fentanyl the mainstays at present. Besides I wonder how much competencies with placing lines in difficult pts comes into this. The MICA guys here have a never say die attitude to getting that line in. Any peripheral spot - I've heard true stories of lines being put into temporal veins and even one in the penis!!!
The guys here have never looked at IO as anything beyond the point of last call.
How ever easy the much marketed technologies like EZIO may make it look, and yes I have used the device, you have the whole body basically to look for an IV line. Two tourniquets, go for the famliar spots first, forearms, cube fossaes, EJ's, lower limbs. There is always a line to be found somewhere before you need to start drilling holes in bone. Putting it that way to me makes it sound like it should be viewed. A SC vein versus a hole in a bone, the blood factory.
Big woosies. Harden up boys. Don't look for technologies to make it (apparently) easy, cause it aint never so despite what profit driven companies might tell you. When you have to do it, sure, give me a tool to maximise success rates with minimal complications. But at the end of the day if you can't find a line the pt is either significantly moribund or you just didn't look hard enough.
Besides if IO was the bees knees why are peripheral IV's the mainstay of practice across the entire spectrum of medicine?
If the JEMS website is anything to go by, the EMS market in the US is bombarded by companies wanting to save the world with their wonder products and make bucket loads of cash whilst underestimating and downplaying or ignoring the nouse, skills and hands on abilities of the guys working the beat. Don't lose your clinical skills boys and girls for the sake of some piece of plastic and metal.
MM