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 Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Registered Users, Subscribers Joined: 27/05/2011(UTC) Posts: 112 Points: 336
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This is a real event that happened to a friend who was the cyclist. You have driving, down on mountain pass in the foothills of the Pyrenees in France. In front of you there is a cyclist. You are both doing about 25 mph. Without warning and for no apparent reason, the cyclist ‘stops’ and goes flying head over the handlebars. You stop and approach the casualty who is lying on his back, fully conscious. You ask him how he feels. He says: “F***k, my collar bone is broke again and back hurts slightly.”
What do you do next?
Steve
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 Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Registered Users, Subscribers Joined: 27/05/2011(UTC) Posts: 96 Points: 288
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MOI -Lightly clad cyclist moving downhill - sudden stop and goes over the handlebars. Increase in forward motion due to slope and little clothing protection from the impact with the road surface.
Suspect spinal injury until proven otherwise by higher authority.
Collar bone pain is a distracting injury and could mask spinal problems.
Immobilise in situ, cover for shock and monitor until cavalry arrive.
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 Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Registered Users, Subscribers Joined: 27/05/2011(UTC) Posts: 203 Points: 612
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See safe - these are European drivers in the Pyrenees we are talking about. Park in fend off, don the obligatory by law high viz waistcoat and place warning triangle(s). Call Gendarmarie/SAMU then set phone to video record before going anywhere near Mr Tour De France who will not accuse you of knocking him off until the cops arrive, at which point he will when he realises that you are a Brit in a hire car with a loaded third party insurance. Be aware that it is also an offence not to stop and render aid after an accident in France. Kent police produce a helpful factsheet available at ports and terminus' in their area http://www.kent.police.u...port%20an%20accident.pdf
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 Rank: Member Groups: Registered, Registered Users, Subscribers Joined: 08/12/2011(UTC) Posts: 13 Points: 39 Location: United Kingdom
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Privamb is the pinacle of knowledge! I would be proud to take any advice given by him..........................poor guy is going to get a pile of questions off me in the new year - Sorry :)
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 Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Registered Users, Subscribers Joined: 27/05/2011(UTC) Posts: 598 Points: 1,794
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lol.......he always has been a field of knowledge.he gets questions all the time
mh
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 Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Registered Users, Subscribers Joined: 27/05/2011(UTC) Posts: 203 Points: 612
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GV, so long as you trust nobody, believe nothing and check everything you won't go wrong. But, advice always here if I can help you start out (and you check for yourself its correct before acting on it because you should believe nothing, trust nobody and check everything!) and there are a lot of good people on this site of many years standing who will offer the same for nothing in return. Sadly this area of work is full of quite sinister characters who pretend to be anything from student ambulance paramedics to qualified doctors as the sector benefited from little regulation which is now dwindling further. Only the other month a bogus doctor got caught out working for a CQC regulated ambulance service doing NHS front line work. You have the RGN ticket so there is your immediate credibility and its something you can make money out of if you do it well with a level head. NHS and care sector will concentrate more on the fact that you are an RGN than someone capable of delivering outsourced training when considering buying in your services, so its up to you to get yourself educated and current as its often the students themselves who smell a rat and report back. Best of luck with your new venture. If done correctly, it is a good financial reward in return for little financial outlay.
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 Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Registered Users, Subscribers Joined: 27/05/2011(UTC) Posts: 112 Points: 336
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Thanks for your replies.
Here’s what happened next: the motorist offered to call and ambulance, but the cyclist said he didn't need one though he did accept the offer of a lift home. His wife then took him to hospital where he was diagnosed with a broken collar bone and given a figure of eight bandage to wear. Still not feeling too good a few days later he went back to the doctors who confirmed the broken collar bone, but added a cracked rib and vertebrae. Despite all this he was back to work within the week! When he told me what had happened, I told him was a b***y fool for not getting the ambulance out in the first place. Now another question: if you had been the cyclist what would you have done? Would you have asked for the ambulance to be called out?
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 Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Registered Users, Subscribers Joined: 27/05/2011(UTC) Posts: 203 Points: 612
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Could you explain to me what an ambulance crew would do with this walking talking patient with a painful shoulder and asymptomatic to neurological deficit? If people stopped using ambulances as a taxi to ferry minor injuries around or ceased calling them out because they can't think of anything constructive to do like put them in a car and drive them to hospital, the ambulance service statistics would not show that only 20 odd percent of all calls are genuine emergencies. If you can pick yourself up and dust yourself down, can stand on two feet without being dizzy and without difficulty in breathing then you do not, as with your friend, need the services of an emergency ambulance.
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 Rank: Member Groups: Registered Users, Subscribers Joined: 27/05/2011(UTC) Posts: 42 Points: 129
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Originally Posted by: PrivAmb  Could you explain to me what an ambulance crew would do with this walking talking patient with a painful shoulder and asymptomatic to neurological deficit? If people stopped using ambulances as a taxi to ferry minor injuries around or ceased calling them out because they can't think of anything constructive to do like put them in a car and drive them to hospital, the ambulance service statistics would not show that only 20 odd percent of all calls are genuine emergencies. If you can pick yourself up and dust yourself down, can stand on two feet without being dizzy and without difficulty in breathing then you do not, as with your friend, need the services of an emergency ambulance. Privamb what level of training do you have exactly? looking at the information given, fall off a bike at speed, presumably flipped over due to being "on back" and c/o back pain, and your telling me that thats not appropriate for an Ambulance to attend?
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 Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Registered, Registered Users, Subscribers Joined: 04/08/2011(UTC) Posts: 71 Points: 213 Location: United Kingdom
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Originally Posted by: PrivAmb  Could you explain to me what an ambulance crew would do with this walking talking patient with a painful shoulder and asymptomatic to neurological deficit? If people stopped using ambulances as a taxi to ferry minor injuries around or ceased calling them out because they can't think of anything constructive to do like put them in a car and drive them to hospital, the ambulance service statistics would not show that only 20 odd percent of all calls are genuine emergencies. If you can pick yourself up and dust yourself down, can stand on two feet without being dizzy and without difficulty in breathing then you do not, as with your friend, need the services of an emergency ambulance. I like your way of thinking - but not for this scenario. I agree with IHCDTech that the cavalry should attend. Its suggestive of a C spine compromise and imobilisation should take place.
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 Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Registered Users, Subscribers Joined: 27/05/2011(UTC) Posts: 203 Points: 612
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Yep, agree. Even if your walking talking patient has categorically refused an ambulance, you should call one anyway. Its for their own good, just the same as when the police attend an RTA and the occupants of the vehicles say they do not need an ambulance, that one should be called anyway to "give them a check up". Every drunk who can't walk straight needs an ambulance to convey them to a place of safety and if you feel or can't reach the TV remote, then an ambulance is the answer. After all there are so many ambulances, and so few calls. Anyone who refuses to let you call an ambulance needs to be wrestled to the ground and held there until the ambulance arrives to truss them up kicking and screaming in full spinal packaging to the nearest community psychiatric facility as they are clearly barking mad.
So, IHCD Tech, to answer your question, if the patient refuses a resource be called, and gets up himself of his own volition, unless the motorist is a HCP with A+E experience who will assess and advise, then no ambulance should be called because the patient does not want one!
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 Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Registered, Registered Users, Subscribers Joined: 04/08/2011(UTC) Posts: 71 Points: 213 Location: United Kingdom
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You seem to be sumising initially that the cyclist doesnt want one. Re read the original scenario - there is no refusal, and no getting up.. therefore until he refuses, the ambulance should be called.
he can then refuse to the ambulance that arrives and they can advise...
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 Rank: Member Groups: Registered Users, Subscribers Joined: 27/05/2011(UTC) Posts: 42 Points: 129
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Originally Posted by: PrivAmb  Yep, agree. Even if your walking talking patient has categorically refused an ambulance, you should call one anyway. Its for their own good, just the same as when the police attend an RTA and the occupants of the vehicles say they do not need an ambulance, that one should be called anyway to "give them a check up". Every drunk who can't walk straight needs an ambulance to convey them to a place of safety and if you feel or can't reach the TV remote, then an ambulance is the answer. After all there are so many ambulances, and so few calls. Anyone who refuses to let you call an ambulance needs to be wrestled to the ground and held there until the ambulance arrives to truss them up kicking and screaming in full spinal packaging to the nearest community psychiatric facility as they are clearly barking mad.
So, IHCD Tech, to answer your question, if the patient refuses a resource be called, and gets up himself of his own volition, unless the motorist is a HCP with A+E experience who will assess and advise, then no ambulance should be called because the patient does not want one! Privamb go back and read the initial post, there was no refusal!
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 Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Registered Users, Subscribers Joined: 27/05/2011(UTC) Posts: 203 Points: 612
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"Here’s what happened next: the motorist offered to call and ambulance, but the cyclist said he didn't need one though he did accept the offer of a lift home. His wife then took him to hospital where he was diagnosed with a broken collar bone and given a figure of eight bandage to wear. Still not feeling too good a few days later he went back to the doctors who confirmed the broken collar bone, but added a cracked rib and vertebrae. Despite all this he was back to work within the week!"
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 Rank: Member Groups: Registered Users, Subscribers Joined: 27/05/2011(UTC) Posts: 25 Points: 75
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Do ambulances in France have "patent not conveyed forms"?
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 Rank: Advanced Member Groups: Registered Users, Subscribers Joined: 27/05/2011(UTC) Posts: 112 Points: 336
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Originally Posted by: yogi760  Do ambulances in France have "patent not conveyed forms"? No idea, but I'll try to fnd out.
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 Rank: Newbie Groups: Registered, Registered Users, Subscribers Joined: 20/06/2012(UTC) Posts: 2 Points: 6 Location: United Kingdom
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As the primary survey of the pt appears unremarkable I would say that the potential for c spine injury would be your highest suspicion/concern. Have in mind also that that the clavicle could be a distracting injury. Therefore with this in mind, and taking into account the terrain, I would suggest treatment of: immobilisation, protect from elements and monitor whilst awaiting arrival of emergency services.
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