You are a relatively new basic with approximately 3 months of transport experience, as well as roughly 6 months of response experience with your campus EMS squad. You are off-duty, working a second job as a teaching assistant / machinist at the student machine shop on campus.
You are in a side room - a large office with no machinery - working on the computer when you notice a fellow TA helping a student towards the door. Just as they are about to turn in, something happens, they overshoot the door, and she goes limp. You notice a slight contraction of her right upper- and lower-arm as her eyes roll back and her legs go completely limp. The other TA catches her, and then, roughly 10 seconds later, she regains function and is able to stand on her own. She is extremely disoriented and does not remember anything after feeling faint - other than her stomach hurting. The other TA brings her into the office, and once you are sure she is in the office and out of the danger of industrial machinery, you immediately call campus emergency services. While trying to relay information to the dispatcher, your boss is telling you that "she's fine, she just needs some water," and in addition to the uncertainty of what ACTUALLY just happened, there are at least 3 other people trying to talk to you while you speak with dispatch. For whatever reason, you tell the dispatcher that there was a student that "passed out," despite your initial suspicion that she has been seizing. Because of the confusion, you are unable to get accurate, concise, and complete information to the dispatcher before she hangs up.
Once the student is seated in a chair, with someone standing behind her in case she has another 'episode,' you notice she is clutching her right index finger, and you start asking a few questions. You discover that she hit her finger with a ball-peen hammer while stamping a workpiece, and then felt a strange pain in her stomach, felt light-headed, and then remembers being seated on the floor with the TA helping her up. She is extremely pale, and denies that there is any problem. She is very insistent that she is okay, when she has another 'episode.' You notice the same muscle contraction and the same eye-roll. Her eyes, again, remain open during the episode, which again lasts roughly 10-15 seconds. You call back dispatch, update them of the situation, and clarify a few details. Because the student squad (for which you are a shift officer) is not currently in-service, city EMS is en-route.
What would you do as
You are in a side room - a large office with no machinery - working on the computer when you notice a fellow TA helping a student towards the door. Just as they are about to turn in, something happens, they overshoot the door, and she goes limp. You notice a slight contraction of her right upper- and lower-arm as her eyes roll back and her legs go completely limp. The other TA catches her, and then, roughly 10 seconds later, she regains function and is able to stand on her own. She is extremely disoriented and does not remember anything after feeling faint - other than her stomach hurting. The other TA brings her into the office, and once you are sure she is in the office and out of the danger of industrial machinery, you immediately call campus emergency services. While trying to relay information to the dispatcher, your boss is telling you that "she's fine, she just needs some water," and in addition to the uncertainty of what ACTUALLY just happened, there are at least 3 other people trying to talk to you while you speak with dispatch. For whatever reason, you tell the dispatcher that there was a student that "passed out," despite your initial suspicion that she has been seizing. Because of the confusion, you are unable to get accurate, concise, and complete information to the dispatcher before she hangs up.
Once the student is seated in a chair, with someone standing behind her in case she has another 'episode,' you notice she is clutching her right index finger, and you start asking a few questions. You discover that she hit her finger with a ball-peen hammer while stamping a workpiece, and then felt a strange pain in her stomach, felt light-headed, and then remembers being seated on the floor with the TA helping her up. She is extremely pale, and denies that there is any problem. She is very insistent that she is okay, when she has another 'episode.' You notice the same muscle contraction and the same eye-roll. Her eyes, again, remain open during the episode, which again lasts roughly 10-15 seconds. You call back dispatch, update them of the situation, and clarify a few details. Because the student squad (for which you are a shift officer) is not currently in-service, city EMS is en-route.
What would you do as
- the off-duty witness?
- the responding EMS crew?