13.1 Essentials of Emergency and Trauma Nursing Flashcards
Emergency Nursing
- An emergency is whatever the patient and family considers to be an emergency.
Sentinel Events
- Medical Errors
Interventions in case of these events
- Patient/Family Focused
- Relieve anxiety and provide security
- Allow family to stay with patient
- Provide explanations and information
Triage
- Sorts patients by hierarchy of severity of health problems
ED Triage
- Those are most critically ill receive the most resources regardless of outcome
Disaster Triage
- Allocation of treatment priorities are designed to maximize the number of survivors.
Basic System Categories
Emergent
- Highest priority
Urgent
- Serious health problem but not life threatening
Nonurgent
- Episodic Illness
Emergency Severity Index (ESI)
- Level 1 - MOST URGENT
- Level 5 - Least Urgent
- Although this is a reliable system, triage bypass, or moving an incoming patient directly to an open bed when available helps to eliminate patient waiting and allow nurses to preform initial assessment and vital signs.
Triage Team
- Has the power to move patients to diagnostics or discharge patient without full admission to ED.
- This decreases wait time in the ED
- Patient flow issues are due to availability of in-house beds.
- ED must be efficient to decrease wait time and maintain flow.
Primary Survey
- Focuses on stabilizing life threatening conditions
A - Airway
B - Breathing (ventilation)
C - Circulation (cardiac output, hemorrhage, shock)
D - Disability (neurological status, AVPU (alert, verbal, pain, unresponsive))
E - Exposure (Undress to assess wounds or area of injury)
Secondary Survey
- Health History
- Head to Toe (reassess vs, airway, breathing)
- Diagnostic’s and labs
- Monitoring devices (ECG, arterial lines, urinary catheters)
- Splinting of fractures
- Wound care
- Other interventions based on condition
Priority Emergency Measures
- Airway obstruction
- Hemorrhage
- Hypovolemic shock
- Wounds
- Trauma/Multiple Trauma
PPE
Level A
- Self-contained breathing apparatus (SCBA) and vapor-tight chemical-resistant suit, gloves and boots
Level B
- High level respiratory protection (SCBA) but lesser skin and eye protection; chemical resistant suit
Level C
- Air-purified respiratory, coverall with splash hood, chemical resistant gloves and boots
Level D
- Typical work uniform