I was considering just posting one part of this in BLS discussion (criteria for initiation of CPR/BVM on a borderline patient) but figured I'd give you a whole story. Based on a recent call I had, but obviously details have been changed to protect the guilty and I added a few details from other calls.
BLS toned out to a male unconscious, PD on scene reports that the patient may be drunk, and has some blood on his face. You arrive to find the patient sitting normally at a bus stop except that his head is down. You lift the head to check pupils, which are sluggish and dilated. No medic alert anything, no ID. There is some blood on the face and hands but no active bleeding and only a minimal amount of blood on the ground. You are unable to palp a radial pulse, the carotid pulse is weak. You are advised that ALS is a while out, and start packaging for transport. C-collar, back board, head bed, and on to the strecher. The clothing is removed. You can visualize only shallow chest rise at about 10 per minute and are unable to auscultate heart or lung sounds in the back of the rig. Carotid pulse is still present but weak at a rate of 80. The patient was decorticate for a while as you were removing the clothing, he is now GCS 3. Cap refill is 3-4 seconds, BP is UTO both auscultated and palped. Your poor service is unable to afford a pulse oximeter or glucometer. The jaw is clenched and you are unable to obtain oral airway access. ALS is still 10 minutes out, you are 1 minute from the local hospital and 10 minutes in the opposite direction from ALS from a level 1 trauma center.
Wait for ALS or transport?
Does this patient need a trauma center?
Does this patient need an NPA? Try for an OPA
Does this patient need help breathing? CPR?
Guesses on condition?
BLS toned out to a male unconscious, PD on scene reports that the patient may be drunk, and has some blood on his face. You arrive to find the patient sitting normally at a bus stop except that his head is down. You lift the head to check pupils, which are sluggish and dilated. No medic alert anything, no ID. There is some blood on the face and hands but no active bleeding and only a minimal amount of blood on the ground. You are unable to palp a radial pulse, the carotid pulse is weak. You are advised that ALS is a while out, and start packaging for transport. C-collar, back board, head bed, and on to the strecher. The clothing is removed. You can visualize only shallow chest rise at about 10 per minute and are unable to auscultate heart or lung sounds in the back of the rig. Carotid pulse is still present but weak at a rate of 80. The patient was decorticate for a while as you were removing the clothing, he is now GCS 3. Cap refill is 3-4 seconds, BP is UTO both auscultated and palped. Your poor service is unable to afford a pulse oximeter or glucometer. The jaw is clenched and you are unable to obtain oral airway access. ALS is still 10 minutes out, you are 1 minute from the local hospital and 10 minutes in the opposite direction from ALS from a level 1 trauma center.
Wait for ALS or transport?
Does this patient need a trauma center?
Does this patient need an NPA? Try for an OPA
Does this patient need help breathing? CPR?
Guesses on condition?