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LA GRAMMATICA DI ENGLISH GRATIS IN VERSIONE MOBILE   INFORMATIVA PRIVACY

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WIKIBOOKS
DISPONIBILI
?????????

ART
- Great Painters
BUSINESS&LAW
- Accounting
- Fundamentals of Law
- Marketing
- Shorthand
CARS
- Concept Cars
GAMES&SPORT
- Videogames
- The World of Sports

COMPUTER TECHNOLOGY
- Blogs
- Free Software
- Google
- My Computer

- PHP Language and Applications
- Wikipedia
- Windows Vista

EDUCATION
- Education
LITERATURE
- Masterpieces of English Literature
LINGUISTICS
- American English

- English Dictionaries
- The English Language

MEDICINE
- Medical Emergencies
- The Theory of Memory
MUSIC&DANCE
- The Beatles
- Dances
- Microphones
- Musical Notation
- Music Instruments
SCIENCE
- Batteries
- Nanotechnology
LIFESTYLE
- Cosmetics
- Diets
- Vegetarianism and Veganism
TRADITIONS
- Christmas Traditions
NATURE
- Animals

- Fruits And Vegetables



ARTICLES IN THE BOOK

  1. Acute abdomen
  2. Acute coronary syndrome
  3. Acute pancreatitis
  4. Acute renal failure
  5. Agonal respiration
  6. Air embolism
  7. Ambulance
  8. Amnesic shellfish poisoning
  9. Anaphylaxis
  10. Angioedema
  11. Aortic dissection
  12. Appendicitis
  13. Artificial respiration
  14. Asphyxia
  15. Asystole
  16. Autonomic dysreflexia
  17. Bacterial meningitis
  18. Barotrauma
  19. Blast injury
  20. Bleeding
  21. Bowel obstruction
  22. Burn
  23. Carbon monoxide poisoning
  24. Cardiac arrest
  25. Cardiac arrhythmia
  26. Cardiac tamponade
  27. Cardiogenic shock
  28. Cardiopulmonary arrest
  29. Cardiopulmonary resuscitation
  30. Catamenial pneumothorax
  31. Cerebral hemorrhage
  32. Chemical burn
  33. Choking
  34. Chronic pancreatitis
  35. Cincinnati Stroke Scale
  36. Clinical depression
  37. Cord prolapse
  38. Decompression sickness
  39. Dental emergency
  40. Diabetic coma
  41. Diabetic ketoacidosis
  42. Distributive shock
  43. Drowning
  44. Drug overdose
  45. Eclampsia
  46. Ectopic pregnancy
  47. Electric shock
  48. Emergency medical services
  49. Emergency medical technician
  50. Emergency medicine
  51. Emergency room
  52. Emergency telephone number
  53. Epiglottitis
  54. Epilepsia partialis continua
  55. Frostbite
  56. Gastrointestinal perforation
  57. Gynecologic hemorrhage
  58. Heat syncope
  59. HELLP syndrome
  60. Hereditary pancreatitis
  61. Hospital
  62. Hydrocephalus
  63. Hypercapnia
  64. Hyperemesis gravidarum
  65. Hyperkalemia
  66. Hypertensive emergency
  67. Hyperthermia
  68. Hypoglycemia
  69. Hypothermia
  70. Hypovolemia
  71. Internal bleeding
  72. Ketoacidosis
  73. Lactic acidosis
  74. Lethal dose
  75. List of medical emergencies
  76. Malaria
  77. Malignant hypertension
  78. Medical emergency
  79. Meningitis
  80. Neuroglycopenia
  81. Neuroleptic malignant syndrome
  82. Nonketotic hyperosmolar coma
  83. Obstetrical hemorrhage
  84. Outdoor Emergency Care
  85. Overwhelming post-splenectomy infection
  86. Paralytic shellfish poisoning
  87. Paramedic
  88. Paraphimosis
  89. Peritonitis
  90. Physical trauma
  91. Placenta accreta
  92. Pneumothorax
  93. Positional asphyxia
  94. Pre-eclampsia
  95. Priapism
  96. Psychotic depression
  97. Respiratory arrest
  98. Respiratory failure
  99. Retinal detachment
  100. Revised Trauma Score
  101. Sepsis
  102. Septic arthritis
  103. Septic shock
  104. Sexual assault
  105. Shock
  106. Simple triage and rapid treatment
  107. Soy allergy
  108. Spinal cord compression
  109. Status epilepticus
  110. Stroke
  111. Temporal arteritis
  112. Testicular torsion
  113. Toxic epidermal necrolysis
  114. Toxidrome
  115. Triage
  116. Triage tag
  117. Upper gastrointestinal bleeding
  118. Uterine rupture
  119. Ventricular fibrillation
  120. Walking wounded
  121. Watershed stroke
  122. Wilderness first aid
  123. Wound

 

 
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    ENGLISHGRATIS.COM è un sito personale di
    Roberto Casiraghi e Crystal Jones
    email: robertocasiraghi at iol punto it

    Roberto Casiraghi           
    INFORMATIVA SULLA PRIVACY              Crystal Jones


    Siti amici:  Lonweb Daisy Stories English4Life Scuolitalia
    Sito segnalato da INGLESE.IT

 
 



THE BOOK OF MEDICAL EMERGENCIES
This article is from:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simple_triage_and_rapid_treatment

All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Text_of_the_GNU_Free_Documentation_License 

Simple triage and rapid treatment

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

 

START is an acronym for Simple Triage and Rapid Treatment, and is defined as being a method that first responders use to effectively and efficiently evaluate all of the victims during a mass casualty incident (MCI) [1]. The first-arriving medical personnel will use a triage tool called a triage tag to categorize the victims by the severity of their injury. Once they have a better handle of the MCI, the on-scene personnel will call in to request for the additional appropriate resources and assign the incoming emergency service personnel their tasks. The victims will be easily identifiable in terms of what the appropriate care is needed by the triage tags they were administered. This method was developed by the staff members of Hoag Hospital [2] and Newport Beach Fire Department [3] located in CA.

Procedure

The whole evaluation process is generally conducted in 60 seconds or less. Once the evaluation is complete, the victims are labeled with one of the four triage categories.

  • Minor delayed care / can delay up to three hours
  • Delayed urgent care / can delay up to one hour
  • Immediate immediate care / life-threatening
  • Deceased victim is dead / no care required

Obviously these categories are only an indication of the desired treatment time; in a large scale emergency, Minor patients may be seen days later, if at all.

When medical personnel first arrive on the scene, they quickly assess the situation and do a call-out; they ask that any victim who is able to walk to separate themselves from non-ambulatory victims and to relocate to a certain area, or they may be asked to assist the medical personnel with the other non-ambulatory victims. These ambulatory victims are either uninjured or have minor injuries that no not need immediate care so they are labeled with a green tag (minor).

With the non-ambulatory victims, personnel assess their respiratory, circulatory, and neurological functions, and based on those conditions the patient is labeled with one of the three remaining triage categories (i.e. delayed, immediate, dead).

The victim’s respiratory function is accessed first.

  1. If the victim is not breathing, then the personnel will try to clear the airway and perform any airway maneuvers to get the victim breathing. If all attempts fail, then the victim is presumed dead, and thus tagged with the black label.
  2. If the victim is breathing, then the personnel calculates the breathing rate.
    1. If the victim’s breathing rate is greater than 30 per minute, then the victim is tagged with a red label requesting immediate care because that is one of the primary signs for shock.
    2. If the victim’s breathing rate is less than 30 per minute, then perfusion will take place.
      1. During the perfusion phase, the victim’s pulse and circulatory function are checked.
        1. If the victim lacks a radial pulse, then immediate attention is required, and thus tagged with a red label.
        2. If the radial pulse is present, then the personnel evaluates the victim’s mental status.
          1. The personnel will ask the victim to follow simple commands.
            1. If the victim is successful, then he is labeled with the yellow tag; medical attention can be delayed to a recommended one hour.
            2. If the victim is not able to follow simple commands, then he is labeled with the red tag; immediate care is needed because the situation may be life threatening.

To check the victim’s circulatory function, a blanch test [4] is conducted (also known as capillary refill). Generally, the test is done at the tip of the finger. The personnel will apply pressure to the nail bed until it turns white.

Depending on the response time of how fast the blood flows back to the finger, the victim will be labeled with the yellow tag (medical attention can be delayed for up to an hour), or with the red tag (immediate care is needed).

  1. If the blanch test took more than two seconds, then the victim needs immediate care.
  2. If the blanch test took less than two seconds, then the mental status of the victim is evaluated.
    1. If the victim can follow simple commands, then he will be tagged with the yellow label, otherwise the red label.

Pediatric START

There have been organizations that have adopted the procedures of START and modified it to provide better treatment for children. Lou E. Roming MD, FAAP, FACEP, created JumpSTART, which is a derivative approach of START that caters to the needs of children during a MCI. The Utah Bureau of Emergency Medical Services developed a training program [5] for teaching JumpSTART. Psychological studies have shown that people react outside of their ordinary scope of behavior when placed in a stressful environment; children's bodies are more fragile than adults, and thus it is important to handle children with more care because they lack the experience compared to adults to take care of themselves until help arrives.

See also

  • First responders
  • Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA)
  • MSEHPA
  • Client confidentiality

External links

  1. http://www.asisonline.org/councils/fire/MCI.ppt
  2. http://www.hoaghospital.org/
  3. http://www.city.newport-beach.ca.us/FMD/default.htm
  4. http://www.wrongdiagnosis.com/medical/blanch_test.htm
  5. http://www.health.state.ut.us/ems/emsc/jumpstart.ppt
  6. http://www.emsaac.com/emsaac_documents/drafts/Triage%20System.doc
  7. http://www.health.state.ut.us/ems/emsc/jumpstart.ppt
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simple_triage_and_rapid_treatment"