Trauma Center/ Air Ambulance Criteria Flashcards

1
Q

What are the requirements for step one?

A

Glasgow Coma Scale, Systolic blood Pressure (mmHg), and Respiratory rate

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2
Q

Glasgow Coma Scale requirement?

A

≤13

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3
Q

Systolic Blood Pressure (mmHg) requirement?

A

<90 mmHg

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4
Q

Respiratory rate requirement?

A

<10 or >29 breaths per minute (<20 in infant ages <1 year), or need for ventilatory support

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5
Q

What is step two?

A

Assessing the anatomy for injuries

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6
Q

Where are you looking for penetrating injuries?

A

Head, neck, torso, and extremities proximal to elbow or knee

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7
Q

What are looking for in the chest wall?

A

instability or deformity (e.g. flail chest)

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8
Q

How many and type of fractures?

A

two or more proximal long bone fractures and pelvic fracture

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9
Q

Type of damage or findings to the extremities?

A

Crushed, degloved, mangled, or pulseless

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10
Q

Placement of amputation?

A

proximal to wrist and ankle

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11
Q

What type of skull fracture?

A

Open or depressed

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12
Q

What type of loss of ability?

A

Paralysis

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13
Q

What is step three?

A

Assessing the mechanism of injury and evidence of high-energy impact

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14
Q

Adults fall range?

A

> 20 feet

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15
Q

Children fall range?

A

> 10 feet or two or three times the height of the child

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16
Q

What type of high-risk auto crash?

A

intrusion, ejection, death in same passenger compartment, and vehicle telemetry data consistent with a high-risk injury

17
Q

What type of auto vs. pedestrian/ bicyclist?

A

If pedestrian/ bicyclist thrown, run over, or significant impact?

18
Q

what speed for motorcycle crash?

A

> 20 mph

19
Q

What is step four?

A

Assessing special patients or system considerations

20
Q

What happens after the age of 55?

A

Risk of injury/death increases

21
Q

What may represent shock after the age of 65 years?

A

SBP <110

22
Q

What may low impact mechanisms be a result of?

A

severe injury (e.g. ground level falls)

23
Q

How should children be triaged?

A

To a pediatric capable trauma center

24
Q

What are patients on anticoagulants and bleeding disorders at risk for?

A

patients with head injuries are at risk for rapid deterioration

25
Q

What do you do with burn patients with no other trauma mechanism?

A

Triage to the burn facility

26
Q

What do you do with burn patients with trauma mechanisms?

A

Triage to trauma center

27
Q

How many weeks pregant should you transfer to a trauma center or hospital capable?

A

> 20 weeks

28
Q

When should you consider helicopter EMS?

A

If anything meets any of the criteria from the CDC Guidelines for Field Triage or Injured Patients

29
Q

What is not required for activating HEMS?

A

OLMD (Online Medical director)

30
Q

What should installations have for rotary aircrafts?

A

A Primary, Alternate, Contingency, and Emergency HLZs that are established and/or predeterminedhelicopter landing zones

31
Q

What should ambulances or fire apparatus be equipped with to provide alternate HLZ coordinates if needed?

A

A GPS

32
Q

What patient diagnosis are inconsideration for Medical Launch?

A

Acute coronary syndrome, cardiogenic shock, cardiac tamponade, and mechanical cardiac disease

33
Q

When should acute coronary syndrome be considered for medical launch?

A

The need for interventional therapy

34
Q

When should cardiogenic shock be considered for medical launch?

A

The presence of a ventricular assist device or an intra-aortic balloon pump

35
Q

when should cardiac tamponade be considered for medical launch?

A

When their is an impeding hemodynamic compromise

36
Q

When should a mechanical cardiac disease be considered for medical launch?

A

When there is a valve failure, ventricular wall rupture, etc.

37
Q

When should critically ill medical/surgical patients be transferred?

A

Post cardiac/respiratory arrest, a requirement for IV vasoactive medications or mechanical ventilation, risk for airway deterioration, severe poisoning/overdose requiring specialized toxicology services, urgent need for hyperbaric oxygen therapy, requirement for emergent dialysis, gastrointestinal hemorrhage with hemodynamic instability, surgical emergencies

38
Q

Who is apart of the special populations?

A

Neonatal, pediatric, obstetric, and neurologic patients

39
Q

Where should special populations patients go to?

A

facilities that are capable of providing appropriate evaluation and treatment