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cooling down the heat stroke victim
oded private tangentcarrot at hotmail.comMon Dec 25 07:34:54 GMT 2006
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Most EMS personnel would recognize and treat a heat stroke agressively. Few wouldn't. But with lay persons it's quite diffrent- too many of them don't understand the meaning of heat stroke. Most frightning to me is that teachers are among them. Luckily, there is a medic in every field trip >From: John Annen <rjannen at yahoo.com> >Reply-To: "Trauma & Critical Care mailing list" ><trauma-list at trauma.org> >To: "Trauma &, Critical Care mailing list" <trauma-list at trauma.org> >Subject: RE: cooling down the heat stroke victim >Date: Sun, 24 Dec 2006 05:29:36 -0800 (PST) > >In the EMS classes that I have taken going back to the basic EMT class >that I took in the US State of North Carolina in the mid 80's, it was >always stressed that heat stroke is a true emergency requiring >immediate attention. > >Do you have any evidence to back up your statement about EMTs learning >about heat stroke from the movies? I would hope that trained rescuers >everywhere rely on their training and field experience, rather than on >depictions in films for determining their treatment. > >In the places that I have been active in prehospital care, heat stroke >is or was extremely rare, whereas heat exhaustion is something that one >sees a lot of, both among the public and among one's colleages. I have >suffered mild heat exhaustion a few times myself working strenuous >rescues or outside events on hot days. In the places I have been, there >has almost always been good access to shade, air conditioned vehicles >or buildings and plenty of liquids to drink, so early intervention in >cases of heat exhaustion, thus preventing their advancement to heat >stoke, is straightforward. > >As with other conditions that one doesn't see very often, perhaps in >places where heat stroke is rare, the problem is one of recognition >rather than one of training, if, indeed, there is a problem at all? > >Best wishes to all for very happy holidays. > >John Annen >Zurich, Switzerland > >--- oded private <tangentcarrot at hotmail.com> wrote: > > > > > BTW > > > > It's amazing how virtullay everybody outside the medical world (such > > as lay > > persons) and many inside it (such as EMTS') don't understand that > > heat > > stroke is a true medical emergency. I think that holywood, with its > > reknown > > scene you see in every third movie of someone lost in desert, > > starting to > > get delrious then crashes, later to be "saved" with a few drops of > > water, > > has much to do with it. > > > > >__________________________________________________ >Do You Yahoo!? >Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around >http://mail.yahoo.com >-- >trauma-list : TRAUMA.ORG >To change your settings or unsubscribe visit: >http://www.trauma.org/traumalist.html _________________________________________________________________ Express yourself instantly with MSN Messenger! Download today it's FREE! http://messenger.msn.click-url.com/go/onm00200471ave/direct/01/
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