lacountylifeguard
Forum Probie
- 13
- 0
- 0
I was given this scenario at work yesterday:
-My partner and I see one person down on a dirt road; unwitnessed injury, thus suspected spinal
-No breathing, shockable heart rhythm
-We have full equipment with us (defib, c-collar, backboard, etc.)
-No bystanders are present
After scene safety, BSI, and calling for backup, I held in-line stabilization, which I was told is correct. After the initial round of CPR, my partner hooked up the defibrillator and we wanted to shock, but I have been told that once I have in-line stabilization, I can't let go until the patient is on the backboard, but I clearly can't hold onto a patient when she's being defibrillated because it would shock me as well.
What should we have done? We could have c-collared and backboarded the patient and then shocked, but that would have taken a good deal of time and we wouldn't be doing CPR while we were backboarding. We could have c-collared and shocked without the backboarding, but the c-collar alone isn't incredibly effective. I could have let go of the head, shocked, and then grabbed the head again, but that would have defeated the purpose of in-line stabilization seeing as defibrillation jolts the entire body significantly. Several people who saw the scenario seemed unsure of how to handle the situation--please advise.
-My partner and I see one person down on a dirt road; unwitnessed injury, thus suspected spinal
-No breathing, shockable heart rhythm
-We have full equipment with us (defib, c-collar, backboard, etc.)
-No bystanders are present
After scene safety, BSI, and calling for backup, I held in-line stabilization, which I was told is correct. After the initial round of CPR, my partner hooked up the defibrillator and we wanted to shock, but I have been told that once I have in-line stabilization, I can't let go until the patient is on the backboard, but I clearly can't hold onto a patient when she's being defibrillated because it would shock me as well.
What should we have done? We could have c-collared and backboarded the patient and then shocked, but that would have taken a good deal of time and we wouldn't be doing CPR while we were backboarding. We could have c-collared and shocked without the backboarding, but the c-collar alone isn't incredibly effective. I could have let go of the head, shocked, and then grabbed the head again, but that would have defeated the purpose of in-line stabilization seeing as defibrillation jolts the entire body significantly. Several people who saw the scenario seemed unsure of how to handle the situation--please advise.
Last edited by a moderator: