1 / 19

Chapter 17

Chapter 17. The Ongoing Assessment. Overview. Ongoing Assessment Components of the Ongoing Assessment. Ongoing Assessment. Once the patient has been thoroughly assessed, vital signs measured, and transport decision made, the next step is to begin ongoing assessment

saul
Download Presentation

Chapter 17

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 17 The Ongoing Assessment

  2. Overview • Ongoing Assessment • Components of the Ongoing Assessment

  3. Ongoing Assessment • Once the patient has been thoroughly assessed, vital signs measured, and transport decision made, the next step is to begin ongoing assessment • The purpose is to identify any significant changes in the patient’s condition that need immediate attention

  4. Ongoing Assessment • Watch this video clip about ongoing assessment

  5. Components of the Ongoing Assessment • The initial assessment repeated • The patient’s condition dictates whether this step will take more than a moment • Carefully reassess the seriously injured patient

  6. Components of the Ongoing Assessment • The initial assessment repeated • Mental status • Use AVPU • Mental status changes may occur very gradually but may have devastating consequences if not recognized and quickly acted on • Airway • Maintain constant vigil over the airway, making sure that it remains open and clear

  7. Components of the Ongoing Assessment • The initial assessment repeated • Breathing: Evaluate effectiveness of oxygen delivery • Did the oxygen relieve the patient’s pain or make her feel better? If not, why not? • Check for equipment malfunctions and kinked oxygen tubing • Check to make sure you did not run out of oxygen! • Changes in patient condition may necessitate switching from non-rebreather mask to assisted bag valve mask ventilations • Pulse oximetry may be helpful in confirming the EMT’s findings; never should the pulse oximeter replace the EMT’s assessment of respiratory effort

  8. Components of the Ongoing Assessment • The initial assessment repeated • Circulation • Ensure that all bleeding has been addressed and remains controlled • Reassess any external bleeding that was discovered and initially managed on scene • Internal bleeding requires evaluation of the mechanism of injury and indicators of perfusion such as skin temperature, color, and distal pulse

  9. Components of the Ongoing Assessment • The initial assessment repeated • Reevaluate patient priority • A low-priority patient’s condition may change, prompting notification of the hospital and arranging an ALS intercept if the patient’s condition deteriorates • Destination facility may need to change based on the patient’s condition • Follow local protocols for this

  10. Components of the Ongoing Assessment • Reassess vital signs • First set of vitals is the baseline • Subsequent vitals are compared to the baseline • Ensure at a minimum two sets of vital signs are obtained and recorded

  11. Components of the Ongoing Assessment • Repeat history • Patients may have been confused or distracted on scene; history taking may be more accurate in the back of the ambulance • Reaffirming a patient’s history improves its reliability • Treatments may need to be adjusted due to historical findings

  12. Components of the Ongoing Assessment • Repeat physical examination—focused or detailed • Some findings may take time to develop • Reassess using DCAP-BTLS • Compare findings with on scene findings

  13. Components of the Ongoing Assessment • Check ABCs and interventions • Check all treatments in progress • Ask, Is it working? • Check splints • Check dressings and bandages used for wound control • If EMT assisted with meds, are they working?

  14. Components of the Ongoing Assessment • Note changes • All changes in the patient’s condition from on the scene and while en route must be noted • Changes may represent a pattern • Patterns reflect the patient’s trending—either positive or negative; this should be reported and recorded

  15. Components of the Ongoing Assessment • How often? • Determined by the priority of the patient • Reassess every 5 minutes if a high-priority patient • Reassess every 10–15 minutes if a low-priority patient • Remember these are just guidelines; a patient’s priority level may change rapidly, and reassessment intervals are not arbitrary

  16. Stop and Review • Why do we do an ongoing assessment? • Is the ongoing assessment done only one time? • At a minimum, how often should a high-priority patient be reassessed? • At a minimum, how often should a low-priority patient be reassessed?

More Related