i'm korean, student of Emergency medical technology dept. it's a little different our style but it's fast and stable we just say when start assessment, DCAP BLS TIC each part, check TD, JVD on the neck. anyway, that's cool Time, Speed is very important on emergency especially Critical Trauma patient
Yeah, the reason I found this video is bc my dad taught me. DECAP BLS, He’s served in the US Army for 10 years. Hes a combat medic, I’m probably gonna be a medic.
That was really not good in my first impression. first you have to try to detect the injurys that can be life threatining, a heavily injured patient doesnt profit from inspektion the arms and lower legs while they have a tension pneumothorax for example
It seems like a bad trade off to log roll them potentially unnecessarily after ascertaining that they have a spinal injury. Unless there is other reason to believe that they may have a massive haemorrhage from their posterior?
i'm korean, student of Emergency medical technology dept.
it's a little different our style
but it's fast and stable
we just say when start assessment, DCAP BLS TIC each part, check TD, JVD on the neck.
anyway, that's cool
Time, Speed is very important on emergency
especially Critical Trauma patient
Yeah, the reason I found this video is bc my dad taught me. DECAP BLS, He’s served in the US Army for 10 years. Hes a combat medic, I’m probably gonna be a medic.
@@REALAithne that's so awesome
thank you for your service, and for your father sir
@@Yakcho thank you, I haven’t enlisted yet but I will soon, I’m planning to serve for at least 20 years, and continue my father’s legacy
No lung sounds my guy?
That was really not good in my first impression. first you have to try to detect the injurys that can be life threatining, a heavily injured patient doesnt profit from inspektion the arms and lower legs while they have a tension pneumothorax for example
Can you make a video like this but say what your doing out loud? Thanks :)
Hey thanks for this
Thanks! Great video
Lousy assessment, I'm an instruction and their were many parts of the body he missed
It seems like a bad trade off to log roll them potentially unnecessarily after ascertaining that they have a spinal injury. Unless there is other reason to believe that they may have a massive haemorrhage from their posterior?
free jokes. did you check which limb it was bleeding from and where?
nicely done
aren't you not supposed to roll the pt if a cspine collar is applied?
You have to
I hate when people act like they know what they are taking about but don't know nothing
Your watching professionals there should not be and of this "your not supposed to do that" stuff they are professionals no reason
You log roll the patient after putting on the c-collar. How else are you supposed to asses for DCAP-BTLS? These guys were spot on.
@@amycormier9265 dang Amy has some emotions about valid questions
If that patient as an amputated leg he would have exsanguinated in the time it took to place de Cervical colar.
Good thing he didn’t have an amputated leg
that wouldve been treated during the ABC's of the primary assessment
Didn’t check PMS bud