I concur.
And I will give you an article that will explain why I agree.
It's in essence an article on "how we can treat patients but why we shouldn't"
While it doesn't go into the discussion if back boarding, it's a good read.
http://amjmed.blogspot.com/2013/04/dismissing-immortality-myth.html?m=1
Interesting read.
I guess my problem with this is that you are making decisions for the patient that you are going to treat them differently based on your perception of their quality of life. I'd be fine with you talking to the person who makes decisions for the patient and having them refuse backboarding. But I think it's a slippery slope to say "well, I'm not going to treat this person for condition x because I don't think the hospital is going to do anything for them anyway."
I understand where you are coming from, but there is a reason why we have protocols. These elderly people are probably the only ones who should be getting boarded for these falls from standing height, since they have a real chance of spinal fracture ( as opposed to your 20 yo drunk who falls from standing height and has about 0% chance of a spinal fracture."
You can argue if spinal immoblization does anything. I'm with you. But as a medic/EMT you are putting yourself in risk by saying "yeah, the protocols say I should do this, but I'm just not going to." We do CPR on people who we know have terminal illnesses because they don't have a DNR.
If you on on scene and really don't want to do something like backboarding the patient, I'd call medical control and get permission. (I'm writing this from the US, I see you are down in Oz, so you may have different rules and protocols.)
*sigh* Now I'm just more confused. I can't tell how much of this involves systemic differences and how much involves my being wrong :unsure:
I'll start by trying to clarify things. My questions is an ethical and medical one. Not a question of protocol.
Medical component: I'm interested in opinions on whether or not these pts would be candidates for extra management. I would think not, but I'm no expert. Would they be candidates for any other kind of management before which immobilisation might prove useful? I'm not entirely sure. I would again think not. I've never once seen or heard of a patient like this ever being transferred out from the local hospital for specialist management. In fact I've seen pts younger and fitter not being sent. This is how my threshold for these types of things has developed. I omit immobilisation only in those who are much sicker and older than where I imagine the cut off to be, leaving wide a margin for error. But I'm still interested in something I might be missing or something about which I may be wrong.
Ethical component: I'd also like to clarify that its not purely based on a quality of life argument. Its more about the potential for meaningful management subsequent to our treatment, the likelihood of good outcomes that are meaningful to the patient. We don't RSI those that, for reasons of age or co morbidities (independent of age) are unlikely to have a good outcome. We don't fly them. We take them to different hospitals. These are all treatment decisions we make ourselves in the field, occasionally with the help of family, but not often. I don't know why spinal immobilisation should be any different in principle. The ethics, in my opinion are the same, but I'm open to arguments about why it isn't. Or why all of the above is wrong.
Online medical control: I see an issue with calling a doctor making not immobilising the patient okay. Why does a phone call to medical control negate the argument about paternalistic decisions about quality of life etc being wrong? If a doctor makes that decision, is it more ethical than if I make it? We don't have medical control, so its academic (but interesting). We also have pretty liberal guidelines. Bending them is generally encouraged. A fair amount of room is made for differences of opinion and different interpretations of guidelines/literature etc. In short I'm not staring down the barrel of a hiding because I didn't precisely follow protocol X. If my senior clinical staff disagree with the idea, (I'll put the idea to them, because it almost certainly won't come up otherwise) it will most likely simply involve them telling me not to apply the idea in the future, or to adjust it a little.
I am not sure which enrages me more, spinal immobilisation or inappropriate administration of oxygen.
I also don't like the notion that you are treating these patients differently based upon their perceived quality of life or medical problems. Obviously if we were talking about continuing life prolonging measures in somebody has significantly reduced health related quality of life from their 300 diseases then its a bit different.
For the patient you describe I would not immobilise them unless there was significant evidence of spinal fracture or history suggesting mechanism capable of producing one.
I think the mechanism in this case was plenty good for her age and medical problems. This thread only applies to people in whom it might be required. If they don't need to be immobilised then its not an issue.
And lets face it; which is going to be better anyway; trying to get blind Nana with dementia to tolerate a cervical collar and being manipulated into an anatomically neutral position, or letting her adopt a position of comfort to minimise movement?
Do you not find that nursing home nanna with dementia and twenty other medical problems tends to get a lower standard of care in some regards than a sick twenty year old. I certainly find that is the case across the board and I think that is fine. The system simply can't afford to be pouring millions of dollars into tests/imagine/procedures for oldies in whom it probably won't make any difference and who are so close to death anyway as to make it all a bit pointless. Half of them want to die anyway and are trying really hard to do so. Why we can't just let nature take its course is beyond me.
Yep. I agree about the movement. But the question as I've said is not about the best way to immobilise someone but about the utility and ethics of doing it the first place.
I like option B.
My only issue is a fall from standing height in a patient like the one described is absolutely a mechanism capable of producing an unstable cervical fracture. Especially with the history of osteoporosis.
Meclin while I agree with you about spinal immobilization I do agree with what others have said as far as making a decision that potentially is life changing for your patient who is someone you don't even know.
Medicine by protocol sucks, no if ands or buts about it. Unfortunately it's something we have to do. I'm not totally sure how it works down in or neck of the woods but I would think you must have protocols or guidelines that dictate your treatments in different situations, right? Do I think this woman you described would benefit from spinal motion restriction? Absolutely not, but in this litigious society we live in to really cover your *** I think a call to an MD to cover iron it would be prudent if you weren't able to talk to a family member or POA for the patient and have them refuse SMR.
It might be worth attempting to get a properly sized collar on her but if she fights you at all just leave it alone.
I've used the KED before with some success on elderly patients but n=1 and depending on your QA/I and relationship with ER docs it might not be an option.
I completely agree that there is a decent chance of this mechanism producing an injury. If there wasn't, we wouldn't be having this conversation.
I disagree that medicine by protocol is something we
have to do and we aren't hyper litigious here..not yet anyway. So like I was saying, I'm comfortable with the protocol/legal aspect of this. Thats not what we're talking about. I'm interested in what you think about the medicine and ethics. Ignore your own protocols for a moment and don't worry about your laws. Thats a topic for another thread.
"I'd be fine with you talking to the person who makes decisions for the patient and having them refuse backboarding."
Five stars for this comment.
In the U.S. I've noticed that a lot of EMTs and paramedics have an attitude that an EMS call must be short and that we can't wait on scene for stakeholders in a patient's care.
I would challenge this convenient assumption, especially for a DNR patient who is suffering dementia and almost certainly not a surgical candidate. We can and should involve the person(s) who speak for the patient, explain the options, and consult online medical control if necessary (shouldn't be necessary for an appropriately trained paramedic but probably is necessary based on the DOT standards).
What's the rush? Do it right the first time. Be compassionate and competent and make the patient's well being first and foremost when you provide care. What's right for a 95 year old patient with dementia is not the same as what's right for a 35 year old patient who is fully functioning. But it's the durable power of health care attorney (or the spouse or son or daughter) who gets to make that call.
In a perfect world you would achieve consensus with the family, the staff at the nursing home, your partner, and OLMC. It can be done. It just takes time.
There isn't a rush. I'm all for sitting around on the phone at scene. I once spent two hours on scene organising agency care for the frail spouse of the our patient after I'd organised for his cardiologist to take him as a direct admit to the ward, bypassing the busy emergency department that he really didn't need.
I spent two and a half hours trying to talk a psych patient out of his bedroom, as well a phone calls to three different authorities looking for options before organising the geriatric psych team to attend him that morning and agreeing on a care plan with the family.
Phone calls to relatives are not uncommon when we are unsure about a patients DNR status or about their wishes regarding invasive care. So I agree with you.
Informing the pt and asking them if they want to refuse spinal precautions is something I've done in the past, but I didn't consider calling the family in this case. I will in the future, although I'm really not sure how I could
properly inform them about the pro/cons of spinal immobilisation over the phone. I'd be happy to give it a crack though.