This is more of a story than a scenario, so I guess it belongs here.
I have an online friend who I have never met. I've known her for a few years and we know each other fairly well, and we communicate primarily via facebook. We are 1200 miles apart but I was apparently the first person she thought of last night when she had a sudden onset of nausea/vomiting, nosebleed, and "chest pain". She emailed me last night with a very urgent "am I having a heart attack? should I call 911? what do I do?" She lives alone, is about 50 and this incident occurred while she was trying to get her car unstuck from a foot of snow in the midwest.
She has some pertinent medical history and cardiac issues were not out of the question. She called me a few minutes after I replied and I was very ready to say "you have to call 911 RIGHT NOW" But I thought it would be appropriate to listen to her first, calm her down, offer some support, and maybe figure out what was going on. It's amazing to me, as a brand new EMT-B, how effective ABC OPQRST SAMPLE is and how it has become second nature to me, even when I cannot see the patient! I tried to treat this from start to finish as a typical medical call and used her as my eyes and ears and hands. I started with LOC and A (" a bit frantic but clearly has an airway"), asked her about breathing ("can take a full breath but it hurts"), C (epistatxis stopped, soaked one full paper towel w/ blood), O sudden, P semi-fowlers pallates, Q localized upper GI pain, R does not radiate,S 7/10, T 1 hour. S skin dry, pulse strong and described as rapid (no rate), resp rate radid and shallow, possible delayed cap refill, near syncope upon standing (slumped to floor). A,M, no further info. P - family history of cardiac issues but none yet for her, L light meal 2 hours earlier, E - high stress roadside situation, car stuck, shoveling snow. Pain severity had dropped from 7 to 4.
I asked if she felt thirsty or dehydrated and she said "very... I know I'm deyhdrated. I'm prone to it" so I suggested water. Within 10 minutes she said she felt better, pain down to 2. I suggested that she keep drinking and that this call was absolutely no substitute for a proper diagnosis. She agreed and promised to see her Dr. and that she would call 911 if anything changed for the worst. Besides dehydration, I also thought of anemia but I don't know a lot about how that presents.
Anyway, I never expected to be doing this kind of phone support. "Hello, you have reached the EMT Hotline. If your airway is open, clear and secure please press 1 now. If you require suction, remain on the line and one of our Basics will be with you shortly"
I have an online friend who I have never met. I've known her for a few years and we know each other fairly well, and we communicate primarily via facebook. We are 1200 miles apart but I was apparently the first person she thought of last night when she had a sudden onset of nausea/vomiting, nosebleed, and "chest pain". She emailed me last night with a very urgent "am I having a heart attack? should I call 911? what do I do?" She lives alone, is about 50 and this incident occurred while she was trying to get her car unstuck from a foot of snow in the midwest.
She has some pertinent medical history and cardiac issues were not out of the question. She called me a few minutes after I replied and I was very ready to say "you have to call 911 RIGHT NOW" But I thought it would be appropriate to listen to her first, calm her down, offer some support, and maybe figure out what was going on. It's amazing to me, as a brand new EMT-B, how effective ABC OPQRST SAMPLE is and how it has become second nature to me, even when I cannot see the patient! I tried to treat this from start to finish as a typical medical call and used her as my eyes and ears and hands. I started with LOC and A (" a bit frantic but clearly has an airway"), asked her about breathing ("can take a full breath but it hurts"), C (epistatxis stopped, soaked one full paper towel w/ blood), O sudden, P semi-fowlers pallates, Q localized upper GI pain, R does not radiate,S 7/10, T 1 hour. S skin dry, pulse strong and described as rapid (no rate), resp rate radid and shallow, possible delayed cap refill, near syncope upon standing (slumped to floor). A,M, no further info. P - family history of cardiac issues but none yet for her, L light meal 2 hours earlier, E - high stress roadside situation, car stuck, shoveling snow. Pain severity had dropped from 7 to 4.
I asked if she felt thirsty or dehydrated and she said "very... I know I'm deyhdrated. I'm prone to it" so I suggested water. Within 10 minutes she said she felt better, pain down to 2. I suggested that she keep drinking and that this call was absolutely no substitute for a proper diagnosis. She agreed and promised to see her Dr. and that she would call 911 if anything changed for the worst. Besides dehydration, I also thought of anemia but I don't know a lot about how that presents.
Anyway, I never expected to be doing this kind of phone support. "Hello, you have reached the EMT Hotline. If your airway is open, clear and secure please press 1 now. If you require suction, remain on the line and one of our Basics will be with you shortly"