Emergency Medical Care AND Emergency Room
Emergency Medical Care AND Emergency Room
Emergency Medical Care AND Emergency Room
AND
EMERGENCY ROOM
Disaster
• Manmade
Scope and Practice of Emergency
Nursing
• Emergency management traditionally refers to
urgent and critical care needs; however, the ED has
increasingly been used for non-urgent problems,
and emergency management has broadened to
include the concept that an emergency is whatever
the patient or family considers it to be
• The emergency nurse has special training, education,
experience, and expertise in assessing and
identifying health care problems in crisis situations
4
Scope and Practice of Emergency
Nursing
5
Priority Emergency Measures for
All Patients
• Make safety the first priority
– For patients, family and staff
• Preplan to ensure security and a safe environment
– Potential for violence in the ER
– May be related to emotional stress, substance abuse,
violent injuries
• Closely observe patient and family members in the event that
they respond to stress with physical violence
• Assess the patient and family for psychological function
• Documentation of consent
– If patient or next of kin unable to consent, nurse must
carefully document circumstances 6
Priority Emergency Measures for
All Patients (cont.)
7
Triage
• Triage (“to sort”) sorts patients by hierarchy based on the
severity of health problems and the immediacy with which
these problems must be treated
– Emergent, urgent, non life-threatening, fast track
– Emergency Severity Index (see table 69-2)
• The triage nurse collects data and classifies the illnesses and
injuries to ensure that the patients most in need of care do
not needlessly wait
• Protocols may be initiated in the triage area
• ED triage differs from disaster triage in that patients who are
the most critically ill receive the most resources, regardless of
potential outcome 8
Triage
• Systematic approach to manage emergent or
urgent situations. Primary survey includes:
– Airway with cervical spine stabilization
– Breathing
– Circulation
– Disability (neurological)
9
Disaster planning
• Purpose
– To provide policy for response to both internal and external
disasters situations that may affect hospital staff,patients
and the community
– Identify responsibilities of individuals and departments in
the event
– Prime function is to minimize the resulting loss of
property, injuries, suffering and death that accompanies a
disaster
The disaster difference
• Large number of people with different
severity levels
• Rapidly declining survival rates
• Narrow window of opportunity for
salvaged
• Disorganised and haphazard delivery of
health care if hospital itself is affected
Planning
• At the site of disaster itself
• At the hospital-managing victims
• Disaster at the hospital itself
• Plans must be simple and
flexible. They should be made by
the people who are going to
execute them.”
george patton
Goals of planning
• to control the large number of patients
and the resulting problems as good as
possible
• by enhancing the capacities of admission
and treatment,
• by treating patients based on the rules of
individual medicine
Goals of planning
• by ensuring ongoing proper treatment
for all patients who where already there
• by a smooth handling of all additional
tasks caused by such an event.
• to give medical support the damage area
Phases to be planned for
• activation phase
• Implementation
phase
• Recovery phase
EMERGENCY ROOMS
ORGANIZATION: Triage area
TARGETS:
– To attend in priority patients with life-threatening
conditions or higher risk of complication.
– To improve medical care.
– To manage patients flow and decrease
overcrowding.
– To improve patient satisfaction and decrease overall length
of stay.
• Routine triage :
– syndromic approach or vital signs approach (depends of
skills, patients flow, material…)
– Triage area at ER entrance
• Massive influx:
– Large area prepared at ER entrance (empty and closed in
routine activity)
– Mass casualty incident guide line
ROUTINE:
SYNDROMIC APPROACH
RED PATIENTS
PATIENT TO BE SEEN BY DOCTOR IMMEDIATELY: patients are critical and need immediate treatment
Direct to resuscitation room. Inform doctor and other nurses.
Registration is done after initial treatment.
Any patient with shock or signs of early onset of shock (tachycardia, low blood pressure, poor
capillary refill, cool peripheries)
Polytrauma (trauma with multiple injuries)
High energy trauma
Any bleeding (trauma or non-trauma) with impending shock
Severe burns: Large area, burns to face or perineum, electrical or chemical burn, smoke inhalation
Fracture or dislocation with neurovascular compromise
Altered level of consciousness / coma
Ongoing seizures
Respiratory rate <9 or >20 in adult and/or cyanosis
Severe chest pain
Hypothermia < 35°C
Suspicion of meningitis
ADULT TRIAGE SCORE ADULT TRIAGE / SYNDROMIC COMPLEMENT
COLOR /
3 2 1 0 1 2 3 CATEGORY
RED YELLOW GREEN
COUGHING BLOOD
SBP < 71 71 - 80 81 - 100 101-199 > 199 SBP
CHEST PAIN
SEIZURE - CURRENT
temp < 35 35 - 38,4 > 38,4 temp SEIZURE - POST ICTAL
Reacts to Reacts to Unresponsi HAEMORRHAGE -
AVPU Confused Alert AVPU HAEMORRHAGE CONTROLED
voice pain ve UNCONTROLLED
REDUCED LEVEL OF
age > 12 years / taller > 150 cm
CONSCIOUSNESS
THREATENED LIMB
DISLOCATION FINGER OR
DISLOCATION OTHER JOINT
TOE
FRACTURE - COMPOUND FRACTURE - CLOSED
PRESENTATION
BURN - FACE / INHALATION
ALL OTHER PATIENTS
BURN > 20%
BURN - ELECTRICAL BURN : OTHERS
ROUTINE: BURN - CIRCUMFERENTIAL
VITAL SIGNS APPROACH BURN - CHEMICAL
POISONNING / OVERDOSE
HYPOGLYCAEMIA -
PSYCHOSIS / AGRESSION
glu<3mmol/l or 0,6g/l
Patients who need surgical or medic al treatment, but whose condition is not
immediately life-threatening, and who are stable enough to wait.
Chest or abdominal wounds or trauma without respiratory distress
Wounds or tra uma without hemorrhagic shock; hemodynamically
stable.
Head trauma with good prognosi s (Glasgow Coma score >8)
Open fractures or traumatic amputations, suspected pelvic o r
femoral fracture.
Large wounds with no active bleeding.
This list is not exh austive
Patients who need non-urgent care, with no short- or medi um-term life-
GREEN
threatening conditions.
Conscious patients.
Patients who do not need hospitalisation, but just outpatient treatment.
Superficial wounds
Closed fractures
DEAD OR DYING
Patients who have died, or whose condition is life-threatening and who have
very little chance of survival, with or without medical or surgical care.
BLACK
Traumatic quadriplegia
st
Burns over more than 50% of the body (unless 1 degree)
-Have patients move to safe location outside triage area that can
-Self defined green patients
2. Respiration: check for respiratory compromise
Link +++ with OT, radiology, ICU, lab, wards : central position