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PROTOCOL UPDATE ALABAMA EMS PROTOCOLS

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IF YOU IDENTIFY MISTAKES IN THE PROTOCOLS OR IF YOU HAVE SUGGESTIONS FOR ... added pediatric dose for treating torsade (CAT. B) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: PROTOCOL UPDATE ALABAMA EMS PROTOCOLS


1
PROTOCOL UPDATEALABAMA EMS PROTOCOLS
  • EDITION 5
  • JUNE, 2009 UPDATE

2
PROTOCOL UPDATE
  • IF YOU IDENTIFY MISTAKES IN THE PROTOCOLS OR IF
    YOU HAVE SUGGESTIONS FOR PROTOCOL CHANGES EMAIL
    John.Campbell_at_adph.state.al.us

3
PURPOSE OF PROTOCOLS
  • IMPROVE PATIENT CARE
  • PROVIDE OFF-LINE MEDICAL DIRECTION
  • REPRESENT STANDARD OF CARE
  • PROVIDE QI STANDARDS
  • PROVIDE EDUCATION STANDARDS

4
GENERAL CHANGE
  • CHANGED THE WORD DRUG TO MEDICATION
    THROUGHOUT THE PROTOCOLS

5
TITLE PAGE TABLE OF CONTENTS
  • CHANGED TO 5TH EDITION
  • TABLE OF CONTENTS UPDATED WITH CHANGES
  • Has been alphabetized and renumbered (except
    General Patient Care and Communications were left
    as 4.1 4.2
  • Deleted Coma, 4.15 and combined it with Altered
    Mental Status, 4.5
  • No new Patient Care Protocols added
  • Two protocols were extensively rewritten
  • Added one new medication (Ondansetron)

6
PREFACE
  • Dr. Campbells email address corrected
  • Clarified the EMTs responsibility to refuse to
    accept orders that are not in his/her scope of
    privilege
  • Added that a pediatric patient is defined as
    someone aged 15 years or younger unless otherwise
    noted in the protocols
  • Noted that anything referring to a pediatric
    patient will be in Tahoma font, in bold, and
    colored green

7
SECTION 2PATIENTS RIGHTS
  • 6Corrected to explain that families of patients
    do not have the same rights as the patients
    themselves. While as a general rule the EMT
    should take the patient to the hospital the
    patients family wants, if the hospital is
    inappropriate or is on diversion, OLMD must be
    called and his/her orders followed

8
SECTION 2PATIENTS RIGHTS
  • 7 Added that, while an ambulance service does
    not have to take a patient out of town if it
    leaves the community without ambulance service,
    that is not a license to ignore the trauma system
    and always take the trauma patient to the local
    hospital.
  • If the ambulance service is unable to comply with
    the regional trauma plan, the service must
    contact the office of EMS Trauma to develop a
    plan to correct this.

9
SECTION 3.3PHYSICIAN MEDICAL DIRECTION
  • Clarifies that medication orders may be signed by
    an OLMD physician or by the services medical
    director.

10
SECTION 3.4MEDICATION AND PROCEDURE
CLASSIFICATION
  • Added list of pediatric Category A and Category B
    medications since they are not the same as the
    adult Category A and Category B medications

11
SECTION 3.4MEDICATION AND PROCEDURE
CLASSIFICATION
  • Added Hemostatic Agents, CPAP, and Ondansetron to
    the list of required medications and procedures.
  • All are Category A

12
SECTION 3.5OPTIONAL MEDICATIONS AND PROCEDURES
  • Removed CPAP and Hemostatic Agents from the list
    of optional medications and procedures

13
SECTION 4
  • TREATMENT PROTOCOLS

14
GENERAL PATIENT CARE 4.1
  • Clarified that when filling out the ePCR, the
    General Patient Care protocol can be listed if
    there is no specific protocol for use in treating
    the patient

15
COMMUNITCATIONS 4.2
  • For stable patients and patients only requiring
    Cat. A treatment, added that the EMT may notify
    the nurse or paramedic at the receiving hospital
  • Some hospitals have paramedics answer the phone

16
ALTERED MENTAL STATUS 4.5
  • Combined COMA 4.15 with this protocol
  • You should review this entire protocol as there
    are so many changes

17
BURNS 4.7
  • For burn patients with wheezing, changed
    albuterol to Category A for adults

18
CARDIAC ARREST 4.8
  • Added that if the patient is in cardiac arrest,
    and has a venous port, you may access the port if
    you have been trained and have the proper
    equipment
  • This requires your medical director to see what
    type of ports are being used in your area and see
    that you are trained how to access that
    particular port
  • Some ports require special needles to access

19
QUICK REFERENCE TO CARDIAC MEDICATIONS 4.9
  • INFANTS AND CHILDREN (Age one month t 8 years)
  • Under Sodium Bicarbonate changed Dilute 50 with
    D5W to Dilute 50 with NS
  • Also changed dose from 1 mEq/dose to 1mEq/kg
    initial dose

20
CARDIAC SYMPTOMS/ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROME 4.10
  • Added note that this protocol is for adults only.
    you should contact OLMD for chest pain in
    pediatric patients (age 15 or less).
  • Aspirin to be given to adults unless at least
    324mg has already been given in the last 24 hours
  • Aspirin is almost never given to pediatric
    patients (CAT. B) because of danger of Reyes
    syndrome

21
PEDIATRIC BRADYCARDIA 4.11
  • Added that epinephrine and atropine are CAT A
  • Epinephrine may be repeated every 3-5 minutes
    until heart rate is 80 or above
  • Atropine may be repeated once in 5 minutes if
    heart rate is not 80 or above (maximum total dose
    of 1 mg)
  • Added that external pacing is for age 14 and
    above and is CAT B

22
CHILDBIRTH 4.12
  • Changed the order of clamping and cutting the
    cord to the correct place in the sequence of care
  • It was originally listed after wrapping the baby
    in a blanket and taking the vital signs

23
CONGESTIVEHEART FAILURE 4.14
  • Added that the patient should be put in the
    upright sitting position
  • Made nitroglycerin and CPAP Cat. A
  • Kept lasix and morphine as CAT. B
  • This was to bring our protocols in line with
    current treatment of CHF

24
COMA 4.15
  • Deleted this protocol and combined its content
    with ALTERED MENTAL STATUS 4.5

25
NEAR DROWNING 4.22
  • Added near drowning as a CAT. A indication for
    use of CPAP

26
POISONS AND OVERDOSES 4.23
  • Since paramedics no longer carry syrup of ipecac,
    deleted the list of conditions in which you
    should not induce vomiting
  • The protocol now simply states DO NOT INDUCE
    VOMITING

27
RESPIRATORY DISTRESS 4.25
  • Added that for pulmonary edema, nitroglycerin and
    CPAP are CAT. A and all other treatments (lasix
    and morphine) are CAT B.
  • This reflects current treatment of pulmonary edema

28
SEIZURES 4.26
  • Protocol has been changed to allow either
    diazepam or lorazepam for treatment of seizures
  • Some doctors prefer lorazepam
  • The only drawback to lorazepam is that it has
    only a 60-day unrefrigerated shelf-life

29
SHOCK 4.27
  • Added that if external bleeding from an extremity
    cannot be controlled by pressure, application of
    a tourniquet is the reasonable next step in
    hemorrhage control
  • This reflects current treatment and current
    National Registry testing

30
SHOCK 4.27
  • Added to use a hemostatic agent if unable to stop
    severe bleeding with pressure or a tourniquet
  • Added that if the patient is in hypovolemic shock
    and the patient has a venous port, you may access
    the port if you have been trained and have the
    proper equipment

31
STROKE 4.28
  • Protocol has been rewritten to reflect the
    current national guidelines for diagnosis and
    treatment of the stroke patient
  • You should review the entire protocol since so
    many changes have been made

32
VOMITING 4.32
  • Deleted NAUSEA
  • Changed treatment of vomiting from
    diphenhydramine to ondansetron (Zofran)
  • The cost of injectable ondansetron is now
    reasonable

33
SECTION 5
  • MEDICATIONS

34
ALBUTEROL 5.3
  • Added burns and CHF as adult CAT. A use of
    albuterol
  • Still CAT B for pediatric burns with wheezing

35
ASPIRIN 5.5
  • Added that aspirin is CAT. B for pediatric
    patients because it may be associated with Reyes
    syndrome

36
ATROPINE 5.6
  • Added that atropine is CAT A for pediatric
    cardiac dysrythmias

37
DIPHENHYDRAMINE 5.10
  • Changed diphenhydramine to a secondary medication
    for treating vomiting

38
EPINEPHRINE 5.12
  • Added use for pediatric bradycardia (CAT A)

39
FUROSEMIDE 5.13
  • Added a pediatric dose (CAT. B)
  • 0.5 to 1mg/kg IV given slowly over 2 minutes

40
LORAZEPAM 5.17
  • Added that lorazepam may be used in place of
    diazepam
  • Rather than only if you cant get diazepam
  • Lorazepam was originally added to the protocols
    because for a time diazepam was unavailable

41
MAGNESIUM SULFATE 5.18
  • added pediatric dose for treating torsade (CAT.
    B)
  • 25 to 50mg/kg IV or IO Maximum dose is 2 grams

42
NITROGLYCERIN 5.21
  • Added that nitroglycerin is contraindicated for
    pediatric patients in the EMS setting

43
NITROUS OXIDE 5.22
  • Added that use of nitrous oxide is CAT. B for
    pediatric patients

44
ONDANSETRON 5.24
  • Added new medication, ondansetron (Zofran) for
    treatment of vomiting
  • Ondansetron is non-sedating but has been too
    expensive to use in the past
  • It is now generic and inexpensive

45
SODIUM BICARBONATE 5.26
  • Added that for children between the ages of one
    month and 8 years of age the sodium bicarbonate
    should be diluted 50 with NS

46
THIAMINE 5.27
  • Added that there is almost no indication for
    thiamine (CAT. B) use in a child
  • Only use is for treatment of Beriberi, a disease
    caused by a lack of thiamine (not an emergency
    condition)

47
VASOPRESSIN 5.28
  • Added that vasopressin use is contraindicated for
    pediatric cardiac arrest

48
SECTION 6
  • PROCEDURES

49
CONTINUOUS POSITIVE AIRWAY PRESSURE (CPAP) 6.3
  • Added near drowning as an indication for use of
    CPAP
  • Added a note that CPAP is not used in children
    under the age of 12 because of lack of complete
    development of their respiratory system

50
ENDOTRACHEAL INTUBATION 6.5
  • Added that orotracheal intubation is CAT. B for
    children and nasotracheal intubation is
    contraindicated in children

51
SECTION 8
  • ADMINISTRATIVE PROTOCOLS

52
DOCUMENTATON OF CARE 8.2
  • Added that ePCRs must be completed and
    transmitted to the office of EMS Trauma within
    168 hours (one week) of the provided medical care

53
TRAUMA SYSTEM PROTOCOL 8.5
  • Changed the protocol to reflect suggestions made
    by the pediatric workgroup and the State Trauma
    Advisory Council
  • Physiologic Criteria
  • Added that a BP of lt90mmHg refers to an adult or
    a child 6 years of age or older

54
TRAUMA SYSTEM PROTOCOL 8.5
  • Physiologic Criteria (cont.)
  • Added that respiratory distress rates in children
    are
  • lt20 or gt60 in a newborn
  • lt 20 or gt 40 in a child three years or younger
  • lt12 or gt29 in a child four years or older
  • Added that head trauma with any neurologic
    changes in a child 5 years or younger puts the
    child in the trauma system

55
SECTION 9
  • ACCEPTABLE EMS EQUIPMENT AND DEVICES

56
BOUGIE FOR DIFFICULT INTUBATIONS 9.2
  • Added this optional equipment to the list of
    acceptable equipment
  • Bougie, Endotracheal Tube Introducer
  • 15 French by 60-70cm for 6.0 to 11.0 ET tubes

57
BOUGIE
58
DEVICES TO PERFORM CHEST DECOMPRESSION 9.4
  • Added Becton Dickinson Angiocath 14 gauge by
    3.25 inches long

59
HEMOSTATIC AGENTS 9.5
  • Added QuikClot Combat Gauze
  • Kaolin based
  • Currently being used by military in combat in
    Iraq
  • Added WoundStat
  • Granular combination of smectite and polymer

60
SECTION 10
  • FORMS

61
STROKE CHECKLIST 10.3
  • Rewrote stroke checklist to reflect the new
    Stroke Protocol

62
REQUEST TO BE TAKEN TO A HOSPITAL ON DIVERSION
10.4
  • Removed the patients family as being able to
    sign to take the patient to a hospital on
    diversion

63
ALERT! BEFORE USING NEW PRTOTOCOLS
  • EACH SERVICE MUST NOTIFY AND PROVIDE YOUR SERVICE
    OFF-LINE MEDICAL DIRECTOR A COPY OF THE 5TH
    EDITION PROTOCOLS (June 09 edition) AND A COPY OF
    THIS UPDATE PRESENTATION
  • It is OK for the medical director to download the
    material instead
  • EACH SERVICE MUST BE SURE THE ON-LINE MEDICAL
    DIRECTORS AT YOUR MEDICAL DIRECTION HOSPITALS ARE
    AWARE THAT THE PROTOCOLS HAVE BEEN UPDATED AND
    WHERE TO GET THE MATERIAL
  • The service is not responsible for furnishing
    copies of the protocols or update slide
    presentation

64
NEW PROTOCOLS CAN BE USED
  • WHEN EVERYONE IN A SERVICE HAS BEEN UPDATED
  • TURNED ON SERVICE BY SERVICE NOT INDIVIDUAL BY
    INDIVIDUAL
  • TURN IN ROSTER TO REGIONAL EMS AGENCY NOT TO
    OFFICE OF EMS TRAUMA
  • Also acknowledge that you have updated your
    off-line medical director and provided copy of
    protocols
  • REGIONAL EMS AGENCY WILL NOTIFY YOU WHEN YOU CAN
    START USING NEW PROTOCOLS
  • EVERY SERVICE MUST BE UPDATED BY OCTOBER 1ST, 2009

65
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