Not to discredit the work of our incredible in-hospital colleagues, but the prehospital management of COVID feels ‘simple’
Well enough to stay*?
Sick enough to go?
How much O2?
*caveats
/1
/2
They are moral
They are ethical
They are harder wearing PPE (albeit safer)
/3
/4
Simple to “manage”; oxygen, chair, diesel, hospital.
The challenge? I genuinely believe they’ll never see each other again.
/5
Give people their chances to say goodbye.
I’m not saying write everyone off, this isn’t a 100% mortality diagnosis.
But recognise that contact & comms only worsens when those ambulance doors close.
/6
We might be the ones hosting that last chance. So I believe it’s our responsibility to do it to the best of our ability.
Inform. Empower. Support. Enable.
/7
“I’m not entirely sure. Hopefully not too long at all. However, he’s really quite poorly at the moment and this virus can be really dangerous, especially for someone his/her age. Before we leave make sure to take the chance to...”
/8
Now is not the time to pretend everything will be ok, because unfortunately it might not be.
The challenge is creating the opportunities for humanity in the chaos
/9
I don’t want to be part of that problem
/10
/10.5
And this again, is multifaceted... practical and human
Practical? This is easy enough, practice with the right kit, know it inside out and it’ll all be fine. Confidence and competence... blah blah blah
/11
Hard/impossible during the fast paced acuity of a CAT1 999 call, donning at the boot of a car
/12
/13
But, what are the marginal gains here. How do I be more human. How can I make this any less awful.
Currently, I swear by the withdrawal back to the car and downgrade away from the L3 PPE ASAP
/14
/end