Assessment is the foundation of emergency care. Without proper assessment and discovery, all other knowledge and skills you acquire are useless. If we can’t find the problem, we can’t solve it. If we don’t know what to look for, we’ll never have the opportunity to save a life. Whether you are a grizzled veteran, or just starting your journey in this exciting field, true, lifelong masters of emergency medicine, first become masters of Assessment.
Learning objectives
By the end of this lesson, you should be able to…
Understand the importance of the EMS assessment
Recognize the steps in the primary assessment
Recognize the steps in the secondary assessment
Understand how to define homeostasis, perfusion, and instability
Recognize signs that suggest instability in your patients
High Yield Content
Basic PPE for the first responder includes gloves, eye protection, and a mask
The initial assessment is completed before the responder ever makes contact with the patient
You do not move on in the primary assessment until the current issue is dealt with
You restart from the beginning of the primary assessment if the patient’s condition changes
SAMPLE stands for signs and symptoms, allergies, medications, past medical history, last meal, and events leading up to the incident
Signs of instability include altered mental status, chest pain, low blood pressure, major trauma, and significant mechanism of injury