Ok here goes...
My boss is an intermediate and he had a driver (not even basic certified) with him. They knew CPR was in progress before they left the station, He could have had a helicopter or another ALS rig on scene within minutes but chose not to. Officers on scene started CPR but then noticed a pulse so they stopped. When they checked again there was no pulse and CPR was continued. EMS couldn't get the ambulance to the patient as he was at the top of an adobe hill, so they loaded a board and the jump kit into an officers truck and rode up. They quickly boarded the patient, and continued CPR. Well actually the driver did CPR while the medic called the Dr for orders. I am not sure what he told the Dr, but the Dr said it was ok to stop working the patient. So they did. I could list our protocol for stopping CPR in the field but I won't. They do say that you can't stop if there was preceding trauma, and if drugs or alcohol are suspected. The patient was ETOH, my boss said he was vomitting beer. It also says you have to have an airway, IV, and do 3 cycles of rhythm appropriate meds. NONE of those were done. So they unloaded the patient from the officers truck, and set him on the ground to wait for the coroner. The bystanders (patients family and friends) asked if they could please put him in the ambulance so they didn't have to see his body laying there. My boss told them NO, he didn't want the mess (vomit and dirt, the patients wasn't bleeding at all) in the rig, and he didn't want to have the rig out of service should another call come in. So they kept him on our back board and loaded him into the back of the officers truck again. WHere the patient vomitted 2 more times! The bystanders were mortified.
So what do you think? We are always taught to call the Dr and let him take the fall if there is one to take, but shouldn't the medic take some fall here? He didn't even follow our protocol. This was a new ER Dr that he talked to, and she had never given medical direction to EMS before.
Would you have stopped CPR in the field like that?
There was no paramedic involved in the call, our protocols say a paramedic has to be involved in the efforts. I always thought a paramedic could stop CPR in the field with medical direction, but only a paramedic.
Any other thought or ideas on what should have happened during the call. Our department mainly has basics, and they can have ALS to the scene pretty quick. But what would you advise a crew of basics to do?
If there was a pulse, and no obvious blood loss incompatible with life, I think you work this code. Add the fact that this patient was ETOH I think you work this code.
You get the monitor on and secure an airway while continuing CPR.
If there was no penetrating trauma and no obvious signs injuries incompatible (I mean really really incompatible with life) like an obviously broken neck you work him. I think the most likely scenario here is the guy was drunk, wrecked the dirt bike, and hit his head, He may have other injuries that were life threatening (internal bleeding) but I doubt he had any incompatible with life.
1. So Drunk + some type of head injury equals the guy quits breathing.
2. Someone not breathing is often mistaken as needing CPR
3. CPR is started, guy suffers a few broken ribs and gets a minimal amount of airflow but no airway is secured and breathing for him is not initiated because I doubt the cop is going to kiss the guy trying to save him.
4. CPR is stopped because someone remembers to check for a pulse.
5. Guy gets 0 airflow, respiratory arrest, than cardiac arrest.
6. CPR is restarted, but still with no secured airway and likely a very minimal airflow
It does not take much of a head injury (or other injuries) to cause respiratory arrest in a really drunk guy. Heck maybe he threw up while riding the bike, wrecked it, and aspirated. I think many things here point to at least a decent possibility of respiratory induced arrest here.
Get on scene, put him on the monitor, fix the airway, and do CPR. Three rounds of drugs, and quality CPR with confirmed airway placement and if there is nothing going for you then I think you can call it.
In all seriousness though, trauma or not, with the description pointing to at least a decent possibility of respiratory arrest I think not working this guy is a mistake.