Preamble Flashcards

1
Q

Responsibility for Care

When transferring care from one level of paramedic to another you SHALL provide??

A

Current CTAS

A hx of the pt’s current problem(s) and relevant past medical hx

Pertinent physical findings

A summary of management at scene/en-route

The pt’s response to treatment - including most recent vital signs

AND

The reason for transfer in cases of inter-facility transfers

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2
Q

Patching

When do YOU patch to Base Hospital?

3 situations

What if you want to patch for life saving measures but the BHP cannot be reached can you still give the treatment?

A

When a medical directive contains a mandatory provincial patch point

When you believe the pt may benefit from online medical direction that fall within the prescribed paramedic scope of practice

When yourequire consultation because you believe the situation warrants medical advice

Yes you may initiate the required treatment if the pt requires a critical, potentially life-saving, intervention and, in the paramedic’s opinion, the intervention would otherwise apply

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3
Q

Intravenous (IV) Access and Therapy by Primary Care Paramedics

What is PCP Assist IV

(something that’s no longer obtainable - certification wise)

What is PCP Autonomous IV?

A

The ability of a PCP to cannulate a peripheral IV at the rquest and under the direct supervision of an ACP legally.

The authorization for a PCP to independently cannulate an IV according to the intravenous and fluid therapy medical directive - auxillary

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4
Q

Consent to Treatment in Non-Emergency Situations

What are the elements required for consent to treatment?

A

Consent must be given by a person who is capable of giving consent with respect to the treatment

Consent must be related to the treatment plan

Consent must be informed

Consent must be given voluntarily

Consent must not be obtained through misrepresentation or fraud

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5
Q

Consent to Treatment in Non-Emergency Situations

What information would (a reasonable person) the pt require to make a decision?

When is treatment informed?

A

The nature of the treatment

The expected benifits of the treatment

The material risks of the treatment

The material side effects of the treatment

Alternative Courses of action

The likely consequences of not having the treatment

When the pt has been informed of all the information required

AND

The pt has recived responses to his/her requests

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6
Q

Discharge from Care

How do you determine whether a pt may be treated?

What do you communicate?

What elements of a discharge treatment plan are you going to discuss? 5

A

You do so in accordance with the ‘Treat and Discharge Component’

A clinically reasonable differential diagnosis to the pt or SDM

The clinical situation related to the most likely diagnosis and/or
differential diagnoses

The symptoms and signs alerting them to seek further medical care (i.e.
clues that the condition is worsening or that the diagnosis may not be
correct)

Instructions regarding modifications(s) of activities of daily living following
the health event

Where possible, provide additional contacts for follow up care

Instructions to call 911 back if their condition worsens or recurs

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7
Q

Discharge from Care

What are the necessary supports to ensure the pt has before disharging?

A

access to food

access to transportation

access to alternate health care follow up

a safe place to stay

responsible adult at the scene available to monitor the patient

consideration of other apparent patient vulnerabilities.

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