How to Respond to an Emergency

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My colleague and I received an emergency call at 03.40hrs to reports of a two-vehicle road traffic collision. Once on the scene it was confirmed as a high-speed collision. I was given a brief handover from the lead paramedic who was dealing with a patient that had sustained serious deceleration injuries due to the mechanisms involved. The paramedic stated,” the patient is mechanically trapped we have to wait for the fire service to cut him free”. Our priority at this stage was to prevent further deterioration of the patient and to promote his recovery by means of reassurance, pain relief in addition to treating the various injuries that he had sustained. I calculated the fire brigade would be with us very shortly, due to the fact the occupants of the other car involved were being extricated and loaded into awaiting ambulances by members of The Hazardous Area Response Team (HART). I decided that this would be an appropriate time to lead a discussion within the group on how the extraction would take place.
This reflection has improved my awareness of clinical leadership in the pre hospital setting.

FEELINGS
Approaching the incident was extremely hazardous due to the road surface being covered with various car components, to add to this members of the public were walking freely about the scene. Once at the casualty I was quick to ascertain he was time critical and my Paramedic colleague needed my assistance, I felt confident developing from a passive follower to a leader, this also allowed the Paramedic to treat additional casualties at the scene. Atwal & Caldwell,(2006)state,” being part of a multidisciplinary team requires many skills; this involves understanding not only one's own role but also the role of other pra...

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...://www.hpc-uk.org/assets/documents/1000051CStandards_of_Proficiency_Paramedics.pdf. Last accessed 27th Nov 2012.
Health Care Professionals Council, (2007). Paramedic, Standards of proficiency. Available: http://www.hpc-uk.org/assets/documents/1000051CStandards_of_Proficiency_Paramedics.pdf.
Last accessed 2nd November 2012
McCormick, S. (2003). Article 12. Major incidents, leadership, and series summary and review. Emergency Medicine Journal, 20(1), 70–74. doi:10.1136/emj.20.1.70

Quote by Lao Tzu: To lead people, walk beside them ... As for the... (n.d.). Retrieved November 8, 2012, from http://www.goodreads.com/quotes/10627-to-lead-people-walk-beside-them-as-for-the

Schmidt,B. (2011). How & Why to Conduct an Incident Debriefing.Available: http://www.firefighternation.com/article/incident-command-0/how-why-conduct-incident-debriefing. Last accessed 27th Nov 2012.

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