CSI 102 Skills Lab 5 Emergency Assessment Daryl P. Lofaso, M.Ed, RRT.

15

Click here to load reader

Transcript of CSI 102 Skills Lab 5 Emergency Assessment Daryl P. Lofaso, M.Ed, RRT.

Page 1: CSI 102 Skills Lab 5 Emergency Assessment Daryl P. Lofaso, M.Ed, RRT.

CSI 102 Skills Lab 5

Emergency Assessment

Daryl P. Lofaso, M.Ed, RRT

Page 2: CSI 102 Skills Lab 5 Emergency Assessment Daryl P. Lofaso, M.Ed, RRT.

Initial Assessment Guide

Primary Assessment Observational Assessment

Appearance, WOB, and Circulation Intervention to any life-threatening

condition

Secondary Assessment (Serial) Vital Signs GCS

Page 3: CSI 102 Skills Lab 5 Emergency Assessment Daryl P. Lofaso, M.Ed, RRT.

Primary Assessment

A = Airway / C-spine immobilization

B = Breathing C = Circulation D = Disability or Neurologic

Status

Page 4: CSI 102 Skills Lab 5 Emergency Assessment Daryl P. Lofaso, M.Ed, RRT.

Secondary Assessment

E = Exposure and environmental control to prevent heat loss

F = Full set of vital signs, wt. G = Give comfort measures H = Head-to-toe assessment

and History (Hx) I = Inspect posterior surfaces

Page 5: CSI 102 Skills Lab 5 Emergency Assessment Daryl P. Lofaso, M.Ed, RRT.

Triage Assessment

Emergent Urgent Non-urgent

Page 6: CSI 102 Skills Lab 5 Emergency Assessment Daryl P. Lofaso, M.Ed, RRT.

Emergent Airway and Breathing

Difficulties Cardiac Arrest C-spine compromise Seizure states Life or limb-threatening

condition

Page 7: CSI 102 Skills Lab 5 Emergency Assessment Daryl P. Lofaso, M.Ed, RRT.

Emergent (continued)

Severe medical problems (Overdose, poisoning, DM complications)

Obvious multiple injuries Excessive high temperature

(> 105oF or 40.5oC)

Cardiac CP Neurological Deficit – Stroke

(CVA)

Page 8: CSI 102 Skills Lab 5 Emergency Assessment Daryl P. Lofaso, M.Ed, RRT.

Urgent Chest Pain (Non-Cardiac) Burns ↓ LOC Persistent nausea, vomiting, or

diarrhea Severe pain Temperature (102-105oF or 39o-40.5oC) Delay of up to 2 hrs will not

compromise life or limb

Page 9: CSI 102 Skills Lab 5 Emergency Assessment Daryl P. Lofaso, M.Ed, RRT.

Non-Urgent

Chronic backache Moderate headache Minor Fx or other injuries Obviously dead on arrival (DOA) Stable illness or injury, wait >

than 2 hrs without an increased risk of morbidity or mortality

Page 10: CSI 102 Skills Lab 5 Emergency Assessment Daryl P. Lofaso, M.Ed, RRT.

Patient’s Condition

Stable – VS within normal limits. Pt conscious & comfortable.

Guarded – VS within normal limits. Pt has some discomfort.

Unstable – VS outside of normal limits. Major complications. Prognosis guarded.

Page 11: CSI 102 Skills Lab 5 Emergency Assessment Daryl P. Lofaso, M.Ed, RRT.

Universal Precautions

All Patients are potentially infectious. Good Hand Hygiene is the key to

reducing nosocomial infections Wash before and after patient

contact Wear a mask, eye protection, gloves

and gown when needed

Page 12: CSI 102 Skills Lab 5 Emergency Assessment Daryl P. Lofaso, M.Ed, RRT.

3 Types of Precautions

Airborne Droplet Contact

Page 13: CSI 102 Skills Lab 5 Emergency Assessment Daryl P. Lofaso, M.Ed, RRT.

Pathogens Requiring Airborne Precautions

Tuberculosis Measles (Rubeola) Varicella (Chickenpox)

Page 14: CSI 102 Skills Lab 5 Emergency Assessment Daryl P. Lofaso, M.Ed, RRT.

Airborne Precautions Management

Place patient in an isolation room with negative pressure

Keep door closed Wear N-95 mask

Page 15: CSI 102 Skills Lab 5 Emergency Assessment Daryl P. Lofaso, M.Ed, RRT.

Pathogens Requiring Contact Precautions

Multi-drug resistance bacteria (e.g., VRE – Vancomycin Resistant Enterococci,

MRSA - Methicillin Resistant Staphylococcus Aureus)

RSV - Respiratory Syncytial Virus Clostridium difficile Scabies