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Lesson 1 Introduction and Overview of Trauma Care and PHTLS
31

Lesson 1 Introduction and Overview of Trauma Care and PHTLS.

Dec 24, 2015

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Page 1: Lesson 1 Introduction and Overview of Trauma Care and PHTLS.

Lesson 1

Introduction and Overview of Trauma Care and PHTLS

Page 2: Lesson 1 Introduction and Overview of Trauma Care and PHTLS.

Trauma Overview (1 of 3)

• Worldwide, more than 5.8 million people die from trauma annually– Motor vehicle-related

injuries are the leading cause of trauma deaths

– Ninety percent of the trauma deaths occur in low- and middle-income countries

Page 3: Lesson 1 Introduction and Overview of Trauma Care and PHTLS.

Trauma Overview (2 of 3)

• In the United States, annually:– 60 million injuries– 40 million emergency department visits– 2.5 million hospitalized– 9 million disabled

• 8.7 million — temporarily• 300,000 — permanently

Page 4: Lesson 1 Introduction and Overview of Trauma Care and PHTLS.

Trauma Overview (3 of 3)

• In the United States, more than 179,000 people die from trauma annually– It is the leading cause of death in persons

between 1 and 44 years of age• 80% of teenage deaths• 60% of childhood deaths

Page 5: Lesson 1 Introduction and Overview of Trauma Care and PHTLS.

Cost of Trauma Annuallyin the United States

• Total economic impact of $684 billion Lost productivity from disabilities– 5.1 million years– $65 billion

• Trauma deaths– 5.3 million years of life lost

• Average loss — 34 years per death

– $50 billion

Page 6: Lesson 1 Introduction and Overview of Trauma Care and PHTLS.

PHTLS Goals

• Reduce mortality and morbidity from trauma

• Provide knowledge and skills for all prehospital trauma team members

• Deliver appropriate care to the trauma patient in the field in a timely fashion – No less– No more

Page 7: Lesson 1 Introduction and Overview of Trauma Care and PHTLS.

PHTLS Philosophy (1 of 2)

• Trauma care should be based on research• Interventions are based on the

assessment of each trauma patient• Deliver the trauma patient:

– With the appropriate interventions – To the right facility– Utilizing the right mode of transport– In the right amount of time– As safely as possible

Page 8: Lesson 1 Introduction and Overview of Trauma Care and PHTLS.

PHTLS Philosophy (2 of 2)

• Research provides us with the foundation for the best practices for trauma care– Research may:

• Validate our current practices• Refute our current practices• Determine future practices

Page 9: Lesson 1 Introduction and Overview of Trauma Care and PHTLS.

Team Approach (1 of 2)

• A diverse team must work together in order to provide trauma patients with the best chance for a favorable outcome © Dan Myers

Page 10: Lesson 1 Introduction and Overview of Trauma Care and PHTLS.

Team Approach (2 of 2)

• This team includes:– Citizens, dispatch

• System activation

– Emergency medical responders– EMS– Transport services – Emergency department – Surgery– Other specialty services– Rehabilitation

Page 11: Lesson 1 Introduction and Overview of Trauma Care and PHTLS.

Communication andDocumentation (1 of 3)

• Communication among all trauma team members is critical in ensuring that proper care is provided to the patient– Timely– Verbal– Written

© Jones and Bartlett Publishers. Courtesy of MIEMSS.

Page 12: Lesson 1 Introduction and Overview of Trauma Care and PHTLS.

Communication andDocumentation (2 of 3)

• Clear, concise, accurate, and complete communication between the prehospital care provider and the receiving hospital facilitates optimal care

Courtesy of Anthony Caliguire, NREMT-P.

Page 13: Lesson 1 Introduction and Overview of Trauma Care and PHTLS.

Communication andDocumentation (3 of 3)

• Good documentation is required:– To maintain continuity of care

• Copy of prehospital care report left at receiving hospital

– For medical and legal reasons– For trauma research– To support trauma system funding

Page 14: Lesson 1 Introduction and Overview of Trauma Care and PHTLS.

PHTLS Around the World

Page 15: Lesson 1 Introduction and Overview of Trauma Care and PHTLS.

PHTLS

• Based on the Advanced Trauma Life Support (ATLS) course by the American College of Surgeons Committee on Trauma (ACS-COT)

• A joint effort between the ACS-COT and the National Association of EMTs (NAEMT)

• First offered in 1983, has been offered in 57 countries, and has trained more than 700,000 providers

Page 16: Lesson 1 Introduction and Overview of Trauma Care and PHTLS.

PHTLS Course (1 of 3)

• Builds upon each participant’s current knowledge base and skills to enhance critical thinking and problem-solving abilities

• Stresses teamwork between providers with diverse levels of knowledge, skills, and resources

• Provides a structured environment to practice trauma assessment and treatment skills

Page 17: Lesson 1 Introduction and Overview of Trauma Care and PHTLS.

PHTLS Course (2 of 3)

• We must critically examine everything we do (i.e., how and why)

• Science is always evolving and helps us verify or disprove our approach to trauma care

• Health care providers must be lifelong learners

Medical practices change!

Page 18: Lesson 1 Introduction and Overview of Trauma Care and PHTLS.

PHTLS Course (3 of 3)

• Based on available research• Updated every 4 years as supported by

new research• Teaches the principles of care rather than

focusing on preferences

Page 19: Lesson 1 Introduction and Overview of Trauma Care and PHTLS.

Trauma Care (1 of 3)

• Principle is what needs to be done for a patient based upon the assessment

• Preference is how the principle is accomplished– This will change depending on the:

• Situation at the scene• Severity of the patient• Knowledge and skills of the prehospital care

provider• Resources available

Page 20: Lesson 1 Introduction and Overview of Trauma Care and PHTLS.

Trauma Care (2 of 3)

Based on assessment– Begins long before you reach the patient

• Information provided from the call for help

– Scene and situation• Safe• Available resources • Number of patients

Page 21: Lesson 1 Introduction and Overview of Trauma Care and PHTLS.

Trauma Care (3 of 3)

– Mechanism of injury (kinematics)– Patient

• Primary assessment• Secondary assessment • Reassessment

Page 22: Lesson 1 Introduction and Overview of Trauma Care and PHTLS.

Patient Assessment (1 of 2)

• Primary assessment– A-B-C-D-E approach – Taught sequentially, performed

“simultaneously”– Assess for and correct immediate threats to

life• Secondary assessment

– “Head-to-toe” assessment– Assess for all other injuries — usually

non-life-threatening– Includes measurement of vital signs

Page 23: Lesson 1 Introduction and Overview of Trauma Care and PHTLS.

Patient Assessment (2 of 2)

• Reassessment– Important to look for changes in the patient’s

condition• Response to treatment

– Ongoing to determine any apparent change in patient status

Page 24: Lesson 1 Introduction and Overview of Trauma Care and PHTLS.

Critical Trauma Patient (1 of 2)

• Primary assessment– Treat at the scene versus treat while en route– Knowing when to do something is important;

knowing when not to do something is even more important

– Reassessment

• Secondary assessment– Only when time and situation allow

Page 25: Lesson 1 Introduction and Overview of Trauma Care and PHTLS.

Critical Trauma Patient (2 of 2)

• Transport– Ground versus air– Mode of transport

• Emergent versus non-emergent

– Appropriate destination

Page 26: Lesson 1 Introduction and Overview of Trauma Care and PHTLS.

Potential Pitfalls of Assessmentand Management (1 of 3)

• Not establishing a safe scene• Overlooking life threats by not adequately

assessing or exposing the patient• Focusing on distracting,

non-life-threatening injuries• Performing a secondary assessment prior

to stabilizing all life threats

Page 27: Lesson 1 Introduction and Overview of Trauma Care and PHTLS.

Potential Pitfalls of Assessmentand Management (2 of 3)

• Performing “advanced” interventions before “basic” procedures

• Not performing a secondary assessment when appropriate

• Prolonged scene times

Page 28: Lesson 1 Introduction and Overview of Trauma Care and PHTLS.

Potential Pitfalls of Assessmentand Management (3 of 3)

• Overlooking signs of deterioration in a patient who initially appeared noncritical

• Failure to reassess• Transport or destination decision error

Page 29: Lesson 1 Introduction and Overview of Trauma Care and PHTLS.

Prevention

• Trauma is preventable• Prevention training is available for

everyone• PHTLS faculty and providers should be

advocates for and active participants in trauma prevention programs

• Prehospital care providers are the “eyes” of the prevention effort

Page 30: Lesson 1 Introduction and Overview of Trauma Care and PHTLS.

Course Mechanics

• Housekeeping• How the course will run• Course expectations• Evaluation process

Page 31: Lesson 1 Introduction and Overview of Trauma Care and PHTLS.

Questions?