190 likes | 452 Views
EMT 100. EMERNECY MEDICAL RESPONDER ADVANCED FIRST AID AND CPR Dan Farrell, M.Ed , RRT-NPS, CPFT, EMT-B. *PETITIONERS BY LOTTERY*. Goals of Emergency Medical Responder Training. Know what you should not do. Know how to use available resources. Know how to improvise.
E N D
EMT 100 EMERNECY MEDICAL RESPONDER ADVANCED FIRST AID AND CPR Dan Farrell, M.Ed, RRT-NPS, CPFT, EMT-B *PETITIONERS BY LOTTERY*
Goals of Emergency Medical Responder Training • Know what you should not do. • Know how to use available resources. • Know how to improvise. • Know how to assist other EMS providers.
Roles and Responsibilities of the Emegency Medical Responder • Respond promptly. • Protect yourself. • Protect scene and patients from further harm. • Summon appropriate resources. • Gain access to patient.
Roles and Responsibilities of the Emergency Medical Responder (cont.) • Perform patient assessment. • Administer emergency medical care and reassurance. • Move patients only when necessary. • Seek and then direct help from bystanders, if necessary.
Roles and Responsibilities of the Emergency Medical Responder (cont.) • Control activities of bystanders. • Assist EMTs and paramedics, as necessary. • Document your care. • Keep your knowledge and skills up to date.
Scene Safety Infectious diseases Body substance isolation (BSI) Universal precautions Immunizations Hazards of the scene
Ethical Responsibilities and Competence • Conform to accepted professional standards of conduct. • Maintain up-to-date skills and knowledge. • Review your performance. • Give complete, correct reports.
Good Samaritan Laws • Laws intended to minimize liability for any errors or omissions in rendering care in good faith. • Legal experts agree they provide little or no legal protection for a rescuer.
Negligence • Occurs when patient suffers injury or harm due to care that did not meet standards. • Doing something you are not supposed to do or neglecting to do something that you are supposed to do
Consent for Treatment 1 of 2 • Expressed consent • Permission given by patient to treat. • Implied consent • Assumed consent when patient doesn’t refuse care as a result of being unconscious, or unable to respond.
Consent for Treatment 2 of 2 • Consent for minors • Minors are not capable of legally speaking for themselves. • Consent of mentally ill • Usually will involve law enforcement. Check local protocols.
Patient Refusal of Care • Competent • Able to make rational decisions about personal well-being. • A competent person has the legal right to refuse care.
Abandonment • A situation in which a trained person begins emergency care and leaves patient before another person of equal or higher training arrives to take over.
Confidentiality • Most patient information is confidential. • Information should be shared with other medical or law enforcement personnel only.
Reportable Events: • Assault (knife, gunshot wounds) • Auto collisions • Suspected child/elder abuse • Domestic violence • Rape • Childbirth • Animal Bites Activating the next level responder usually takes care of this requirement
Reporting: Emergency Medical Responder assesses scene and patient and activates EMS by calling 911 Dispatch: Appropriate equipment and personnel are dispatched to scene. First response: Firefighters or law enforcement personnel are often first on scene. EMS response: EMT-Bs, EMT-Is, or paramedics arrive shortly thereafter. Hospital care: Patient is taken to hospital if necessary. The Emergency Medical Services System (EMS)
911 • Can be called from any phone (including pay phones without inserting money) • Give exact nature and location of emergency • Exact address including building and room numbers, floor, etc • Hang up last! • If called by mistake, stay on line and explain. • Don’t just hang up!