TheLocalMedic
Grumpy Badger
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Even the best of us have bad days, but some seem to have worse days than others... Last week, a medic I know had one of these worse days, and now she's under some serious scrutiny.
She had two patients at the same scene, a woman who was unconscious in diabetic ketoacidosis and her husband who was having crushing chest pain. Granted, this is a crappy situation to be put in, but this is where a medic really has to get it in gear and start making some command decisions so that both patients will get the care they need. The logical choice, if I may be a Monday morning quarterback, would have been to treat both at scene while calling for an additional ambulance to take one of the patients (there was another unit posted not far away at the time).
Instead, she made the decision to try and treat and transport both. In the process she got completely overwhelmed and started to spin out. After a 30 minute scene time where neither patient was given any treatment besides having their vitals taken, they loaded up and transported code 3 to the nearest hospital. The medic tried repeatedly to start an IV in the DKA patient on the gurney, and it wasn't until nearly 5 minutes into the transport that she even got nitro and aspirin into the cardiac patient who was sitting in the captain's seat.
Later the cardiac patient was shown to be having a STEMI with elevated troponin and was flown to a cardiac cath lab. I do not know the outcome of the DKA patient, but I do know that the medic was never successful in getting that IV she was trying so hard for. The EMT that she was working with wide-eyed after the call, saying that he was shocked at how frazzled his partner had become, saying that "she totally lost it".
As I said before, this whole situation can be somewhat challenging, but after hearing about how this medic lost her cool and spun out it really makes me question her abilities...
Have you had challenging scenes with multiple patients? How did you deal with them? Is there anything you would do differently looking back?
She had two patients at the same scene, a woman who was unconscious in diabetic ketoacidosis and her husband who was having crushing chest pain. Granted, this is a crappy situation to be put in, but this is where a medic really has to get it in gear and start making some command decisions so that both patients will get the care they need. The logical choice, if I may be a Monday morning quarterback, would have been to treat both at scene while calling for an additional ambulance to take one of the patients (there was another unit posted not far away at the time).
Instead, she made the decision to try and treat and transport both. In the process she got completely overwhelmed and started to spin out. After a 30 minute scene time where neither patient was given any treatment besides having their vitals taken, they loaded up and transported code 3 to the nearest hospital. The medic tried repeatedly to start an IV in the DKA patient on the gurney, and it wasn't until nearly 5 minutes into the transport that she even got nitro and aspirin into the cardiac patient who was sitting in the captain's seat.
Later the cardiac patient was shown to be having a STEMI with elevated troponin and was flown to a cardiac cath lab. I do not know the outcome of the DKA patient, but I do know that the medic was never successful in getting that IV she was trying so hard for. The EMT that she was working with wide-eyed after the call, saying that he was shocked at how frazzled his partner had become, saying that "she totally lost it".
As I said before, this whole situation can be somewhat challenging, but after hearing about how this medic lost her cool and spun out it really makes me question her abilities...
Have you had challenging scenes with multiple patients? How did you deal with them? Is there anything you would do differently looking back?