Chapter 38-41 Flashcards
- Upon arrival at a trench rescue operation, you should ___________ .
park as close to the incident as possible
park at least 500 feet from the incident
assist with the rescue operation
park at least 500 feet from the incident
- While staged at the scene of a structure fire, the EMT should _________ .
locate the safety officer b. stay with the incident commander
assess firefighters for signs of fatigue
remain with the ambulance :
remain with the ambulance
- A 19-year-old female has just been extricated from her severely damaged car. She is on a long backboard and has been moved to a place of safety. As your partner maintains manual stabilization of her head, you perform a rapid assessment. The patient is unresponsive, has slow and shallow respirations, and has bilaterally closed femur deformities. You should:
stabilize her legs with long board splints.
apply oxygen via a nonrebreathing mask.
obtain baseline vital signs and transport at once.
direct your partner to begin ventilatory assistance.
direct your partner to begin ventilatory assistance.
- Returning the emergency unit to service is part of the __________ .
transfer phase
hazard-control phase
termination phase
support phase
termination phase
- If a technical rescue team is required at the scene, but is not present when you arrive, you should:
don personal protective equipment and begin the rescue process.
check with the incident commander to ensure that the team is en route.
remain with your ambulance until the rescue team arrives at the scene.
have fire personnel initiate the rescue process if they are at the scene.
check with the incident commander to ensure that the team is en route.
- After primary triage, the triage supervisor should communicate all of the following information to the medical branch officer, EXCEPT:
the total number of patients that have been triaged.
the recommended transport destination for each patient.
recommendations for movement to the treatment area.
the number of patients in each triage category.
the recommended transport destination for each patient.
- In preparing for a disaster, EMS systems should have enough supplies for at least a _________ period of self-sufficiency.
24-hour
48-hour
72-hour
96-hour
72-hour
- You are approaching an overturned tanker truck to assess the driver, who appears to be unresponsive. As you get closer to the vehicle, you note the smell of noxious fumes and find that you are in the midst of a vapor cloud. What should you do?
Remain where you are and perform a visual assessment of the patient.
Cover your face with your shirt and quickly extricate the injured driver.
Exit the area immediately and gather information for the HazMat team.
Realize that you are in the danger zone and prevent others from entering.
Exit the area immediately and gather information for the HazMat team.
- The FIRST step in the START triage system is to:
focus on the patients who are unconscious.
scan the area for patients with severe bleeding.
move all walking patients to a designated area.
get a quick head count of all the patients involved.
move all walking patients to a designated area.
- As a triage supervisor, you:
must prepare patients for transport before they leave the triage area.
must not begin treatment until all patients have been triaged.
are responsible for providing initial treatment to all patients.
should communicate with area hospitals regarding their capabilities.
must not begin treatment until all patients have been triaged.
- You are triaging four patients who were involved in a head-on motor vehicle crash. Which of the following patients should be assigned the highest (red) triage category?
A 50-year-old male with an open head injury and no pulse
A 49-year-old female with diabetes and difficulty breathing
A 36-year-old female with back pain and numb extremities
A 29-year-old male with bilaterally closed femur deformities
A 49-year-old female with diabetes and difficulty breathing
- The function of the National Incident Management System (NIMS) is to:
prepare for, prevent, respond to, and recover from domestic incidents.
facilitate a standard method of incident command for natural disasters.
prepare for the potential of a nuclear attack against the United States.
educate city and county governments regarding foreign terrorist attacks.
prepare for, prevent, respond to, and recover from domestic incidents.
- A supervisor who has more than seven people reporting to him or her:
is more beneficial to the overall effort than a supervisor with fewer personnel because his or her team can accomplish more tasks.
should regularly report to the incident commander (IC) to inform him or her of the functions that his or her team is performing.
has exceeded an effective span of control and should divide tasks and delegate the supervision of some tasks to another person.
should assign a specific task to each person reporting to him or her and regularly follow up to ensure that the tasks were carried out.
has exceeded an effective span of control and should divide tasks and delegate the supervision of some tasks to another person.
- While triaging patients at the scene of a building collapse, you encounter a young child who is conscious, alert, and breathing: has bilateral radial pulses, and has a severely angulated leg, which is not bleeding. According to the JumpSTART triage system, you should:
quickly bind his legs together to stabilize the fracture, and continue triaging.
assign him a delayed (yellow) category and continue triaging the other patients.
evacuate him to a designated area and assign him a minimal (green) category.
apply high-flow oxygen, obtain baseline vital signs, and continue triaging.
assign him a delayed (yellow) category and continue triaging the other patients
- Following proper decontamination, a 30-year-old male is brought to you. He is semiconscious and has rapid, shallow respirations. A quick visual assessment reveals no obvious bleeding. You should
begin some form of positive-pressure ventilation.
ask a firefighter what the patient was exposed to.
perform a rapid assessment to locate critical injuries.
administer high-flow oxygen via a nonrebreathing mask.
begin some form of positive-pressure ventilation.