Hello I’m a relatively new medic with only about three year’s experience. I have been reading on here for some time and I have picked up a lot I have been able to use. I would like your opinion on a call I had.
I was dispatched to a report of a 7 y/o with trouble breathing. The dispatcher didn’t have any other info for me. We were about 6 miles from the address and the BLS eng company was right around the corner. I arrived to find a Halloween block party. There were cars everywhere and we couldn’t get down the street. I looked down and saw a flash light about 6 houses down. This house was decorated and had a smoke machine going. I walked up to see three firefighters looking down at a child lying across her mother’s lap. One of the firemen was holding an adult Duo-neb mask over her face. The child was completely unresponsive breathing about 40/min with retractions. I started asking the mother questions:
Does she have Asthma – yes
Ever been vent depended – No
Allergies /Meds – No/Inhalers prn
Age/Wt. – 7 y/o 32 kg
I sent my partner and a fireman back to draw up .3 epi, 1.5 grams of mag, and spike a bag. I popped a ped mask out for the Duo-neb, placed pt on the cot and we started dodging cars to the truck. We got in and my partner handed me the epi, no response to the stick. Spo2 82, HR 120, RR still about 40, not moving any air at all. My partner gets us moving. I put a 20 ga in her left ac and again she never moved. I had the fireman pull out the ped bvm and an OPA but told him not to use them yet. Spo2 is now 86. We had about a 20 transport time to the children’s hospital or a 10 min to the closest. By the time we get out of the maze of homes and cars the mag is going. In just a few min the RR slow and I can hear wheezing. When we get to the outside hospital the spo2 is 99 and she pulls at the mask.
Now that we’re at the ED she’s doing even better. It was the same song and dance “ hey she should of went to peds, She’s not that bad”. I laughed at her and the mom hugged us.
The fireman asked me why I didn’t want him to bag her or place an OPA. I explained that this pt was fighting to breath. If we would have bagged her it would, more than likely, knock out her respiratory drive. Plus the compliance would have poor. I also explained she’s never been intubated before. More and more studies are pointing to poor out comes for children that are intubated. The OPA could have caused vomiting if the gag reflex was intact plus reflex bradycardia and decreased what little metabolism she had left. We got to her right when she was on the fence. She needed drugs to help reverse the swelling. There was an older medic in the room that over head this said I put that child in danger for not focusing on the hypoxia first. He said I was putting the p before the e in EMT-P. I really respect this guy and I was crushed to be honest. Did I? Would any of you guys done anything differently? Thanks for taking the time to read this.
I was dispatched to a report of a 7 y/o with trouble breathing. The dispatcher didn’t have any other info for me. We were about 6 miles from the address and the BLS eng company was right around the corner. I arrived to find a Halloween block party. There were cars everywhere and we couldn’t get down the street. I looked down and saw a flash light about 6 houses down. This house was decorated and had a smoke machine going. I walked up to see three firefighters looking down at a child lying across her mother’s lap. One of the firemen was holding an adult Duo-neb mask over her face. The child was completely unresponsive breathing about 40/min with retractions. I started asking the mother questions:
Does she have Asthma – yes
Ever been vent depended – No
Allergies /Meds – No/Inhalers prn
Age/Wt. – 7 y/o 32 kg
I sent my partner and a fireman back to draw up .3 epi, 1.5 grams of mag, and spike a bag. I popped a ped mask out for the Duo-neb, placed pt on the cot and we started dodging cars to the truck. We got in and my partner handed me the epi, no response to the stick. Spo2 82, HR 120, RR still about 40, not moving any air at all. My partner gets us moving. I put a 20 ga in her left ac and again she never moved. I had the fireman pull out the ped bvm and an OPA but told him not to use them yet. Spo2 is now 86. We had about a 20 transport time to the children’s hospital or a 10 min to the closest. By the time we get out of the maze of homes and cars the mag is going. In just a few min the RR slow and I can hear wheezing. When we get to the outside hospital the spo2 is 99 and she pulls at the mask.
Now that we’re at the ED she’s doing even better. It was the same song and dance “ hey she should of went to peds, She’s not that bad”. I laughed at her and the mom hugged us.
The fireman asked me why I didn’t want him to bag her or place an OPA. I explained that this pt was fighting to breath. If we would have bagged her it would, more than likely, knock out her respiratory drive. Plus the compliance would have poor. I also explained she’s never been intubated before. More and more studies are pointing to poor out comes for children that are intubated. The OPA could have caused vomiting if the gag reflex was intact plus reflex bradycardia and decreased what little metabolism she had left. We got to her right when she was on the fence. She needed drugs to help reverse the swelling. There was an older medic in the room that over head this said I put that child in danger for not focusing on the hypoxia first. He said I was putting the p before the e in EMT-P. I really respect this guy and I was crushed to be honest. Did I? Would any of you guys done anything differently? Thanks for taking the time to read this.