First Aid for Colleges and Universities 10th Edition Chapter 28 © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc....

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First Aid for Colleges and Universities 10th Edition Chapter 28 © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Psychological Emergencies and Disasters Slide Presentation prepared by Randall Benner, M.Ed., NREMT-P

Transcript of First Aid for Colleges and Universities 10th Edition Chapter 28 © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc....

Page 1: First Aid for Colleges and Universities 10th Edition Chapter 28 © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Psychological Emergencies and Disasters Slide Presentation.

First Aid for Colleges and Universities

10th Edition

Chapter 28

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.

Psychological Emergencies and Disasters

Slide Presentation prepared by

Randall Benner, M.Ed., NREMT-P

Page 2: First Aid for Colleges and Universities 10th Edition Chapter 28 © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Psychological Emergencies and Disasters Slide Presentation.

Learning Objectives

• Discuss the goals of psychological first aid care.• Outline the basic principles of psychological first

aid care.• List the factors that cause psychological

changes.• Distinguish between psychological and physical

emergencies.• Discuss psychological emergencies, including

panic, agitation, and bizarre thinking/behavior.

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.

Page 3: First Aid for Colleges and Universities 10th Edition Chapter 28 © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Psychological Emergencies and Disasters Slide Presentation.

Learning Objectives

• Discuss the risk factors for suicide.• Describe how to manage a suicidal person.• Discuss the principles in assessing

psychological emergencies.• Discuss the legal considerations in managing

psychological emergencies.• Describe how to manage a violent victim.

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.

Page 4: First Aid for Colleges and Universities 10th Edition Chapter 28 © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Psychological Emergencies and Disasters Slide Presentation.

Learning Objectives

• Describe and demonstrate methods of calming a person undergoing a psychological emergency.

• Describe and demonstrate how to restrain a violent victim.

• Discuss how to manage mass casualties and disasters.

• Describe how to perform triage.

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Page 5: First Aid for Colleges and Universities 10th Edition Chapter 28 © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Psychological Emergencies and Disasters Slide Presentation.

Introduction

• Psychological emergencies are challenging because you cannot “see” what you're treating.

• The First Aider must be able to distinguish between physical and psychological emergencies.

• Psychological support is often as critical to saving life as first aid care is for physical trauma.

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Page 6: First Aid for Colleges and Universities 10th Edition Chapter 28 © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Psychological Emergencies and Disasters Slide Presentation.

Basic Goals and Principles

• A psychological emergency is one in which a person exhibits abnormal behavior.– Abnormal means unacceptable or intolerable to

others.

• Goals of psychological first aid care– Help the person regain normal function.– If normalcy is impossible, then minimize disability.– Decrease intensity of emotional response.– Prevent the person from hurting themself or others.

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Page 7: First Aid for Colleges and Universities 10th Edition Chapter 28 © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Psychological Emergencies and Disasters Slide Presentation.

Signs and Symptoms of Psychological Distress

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Page 8: First Aid for Colleges and Universities 10th Edition Chapter 28 © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Psychological Emergencies and Disasters Slide Presentation.

Principles of Psychological Care

• Every person has limitations (even you).• Each person has a right to his or her feelings.• Each person has more ability to cope than they

may think.• Everyone experiences emotional disturbances

when involved with injury or crisis. • Emotional injury is real.• People in crisis do not “just get better.”• Understanding cultural differences is important.

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Page 9: First Aid for Colleges and Universities 10th Edition Chapter 28 © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Psychological Emergencies and Disasters Slide Presentation.

Victims with Special Needs

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• Elderly/geriatric people• Very young children/infants• Deaf people• Blind people• Non-English speakers• Confused/developmentally disabled people

Page 10: First Aid for Colleges and Universities 10th Edition Chapter 28 © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Psychological Emergencies and Disasters Slide Presentation.

Basic First Aid for Psychological Emergencies

• Guidelines for providing psychological care– Assure your own safety.– Identify yourself.– Express your desire to help.– Speak in a way the victim can understand.– Act interested, give reassurance.– Do not invade victim’s personal space.– Do not lie to or mislead the victim.– Do not give false hope.– Do not judge, criticize, argue, or be overly

sympathetic.

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Page 11: First Aid for Colleges and Universities 10th Edition Chapter 28 © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Psychological Emergencies and Disasters Slide Presentation.

Physical Causes of Psychological Crises

• Understand the types of physical problems that may cause psychological emergencies.– Low sugar, lack of oxygen, head trauma,

environmental extremes

• Distinguish between physical and psychological symptoms and effects.

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Page 12: First Aid for Colleges and Universities 10th Edition Chapter 28 © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Psychological Emergencies and Disasters Slide Presentation.

Common Psychological Emergencies

• Panic– Overwhelming feeling of helplessness in response to

fear or stress

• Agitation– Uneasiness or upset response

• Bizarre thinking/behavior– Inappropriate thoughts or behavior

• Danger to self– Stems from depression

• Danger to others– Violence is used in attempt to gain control or security

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Page 13: First Aid for Colleges and Universities 10th Edition Chapter 28 © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Psychological Emergencies and Disasters Slide Presentation.

Psychological Crises

• Suicide– Any willful act designed to end one’s own life

• Risk factors for suicide– Age, gender, mental state, health status

• First aid care for suicide– First ensure your own safety.– Assess and treat victim for physical injury.– Determine the seriousness of victim's intent.– Calm the victim and don't leave them alone.– Protect the victim from self-harm.

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Page 14: First Aid for Colleges and Universities 10th Edition Chapter 28 © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Psychological Emergencies and Disasters Slide Presentation.

Suicide

• Defined as any willful act designed to end one's own life

• Three times more women than men attempt it• Three times more men than women complete it• Regarded as vastly under-reported• Many victims make last-minute attempts to

communicate their intentions.• Every suicidal act, gesture, or suggestion should

be regarded seriously.

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Page 15: First Aid for Colleges and Universities 10th Edition Chapter 28 © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Psychological Emergencies and Disasters Slide Presentation.

Suicide Risk Factors

• Single male over age 40• Alcoholism or drug abuse• Suicidal gestures or plans• Depression• Gathering potential suicide equipment• History of self-destructive behavior• Recent loss, illness, bad news• Arrest, imprisonment, job loss

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Page 16: First Aid for Colleges and Universities 10th Edition Chapter 28 © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Psychological Emergencies and Disasters Slide Presentation.

Psychological Assessment Principles

• Identify yourself.• Be honest with the victim.• Ask questions in a calm voice.• Allow the victim to answer questions completely.• Acknowledge their feelings or limitations.• Determine their level of consciousness,

orientation, and contact with reality.

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Page 17: First Aid for Colleges and Universities 10th Edition Chapter 28 © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Psychological Emergencies and Disasters Slide Presentation.

Assessing for Potential Violence

• Locate the victim and look for weapons.• Determine whether you can handle the

situation alone.• Try to get a history from family or bystanders.• Look for physical signs of aggression.

– Is the victim yelling, cursing, arguing, threatening?

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Page 18: First Aid for Colleges and Universities 10th Edition Chapter 28 © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Psychological Emergencies and Disasters Slide Presentation.

Legal Considerations

• Guidelines to reduce your legal liability– Whenever possible, get victim consent.– Document what happened if victim refuses care.– Avoid unreasonable force.– Seek police direction or involvement.– Protect yourself from false accusations.– Manage the crime scene, if applicable.

• Protect items, limit bystanders, document everything.

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Page 19: First Aid for Colleges and Universities 10th Edition Chapter 28 © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Psychological Emergencies and Disasters Slide Presentation.

Managing a Violent Victim

• Maintain a comfortable distance. • Make no quick movements.• Respond honestly but don't encourage

unrealistic expectations.• Don't threaten, challenge, or argue.• Involve trusted family or friends, when possible.• Don't leave the victim alone.• Maintain eye contact.• Don't force the victim to make decisions.• Disperse onlookers, if any.

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Page 20: First Aid for Colleges and Universities 10th Edition Chapter 28 © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Psychological Emergencies and Disasters Slide Presentation.

Restraining a Violent Patient

• Gather enough people to overpower the victim.• Plan your actions before attempting them.• Only use as much force as needed.• Act quickly once “take down” is initiated.• Assign each First Aider a limb to secure.• Place victim supine, do not sit on chest or

abdomen.• Avoid putting undue pressure on the victim’s

head, face, neck, or back.

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Page 21: First Aid for Colleges and Universities 10th Edition Chapter 28 © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Psychological Emergencies and Disasters Slide Presentation.

Mass Casualties and Disasters

• Defined as a situation involving more than one casualty

• American Psychiatric Association has identified five types of reactions– Normal

• Requires little or no emergency care

• Calm reassurance may suffice

– Panic• Loss of judgment and reason

• Be firm, calm, get help

– Overreaction• Explosion of senseless activity

• Let victim talk, give them something to do© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.

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Mass Casualties and Disasters

– Underreaction• Unable to recover from shock

• Establish contact, encourage talk, provide food/drink

– Severe physical reaction (conversion hysteria)• Victim converts anxiety into actual physical disabilities

• Express concern, summon medical aid, give a simple assignment

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Page 23: First Aid for Colleges and Universities 10th Edition Chapter 28 © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Psychological Emergencies and Disasters Slide Presentation.

Managing Mass Disasters

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• Do not become overwhelmed.• Assist rescuers on scene (EMS, PD, FD, etc.).• Encourage capable victims or bystanders to

assist.• Assess and care for physical injuries

immediately.• Keep spectators away.• Respect the right of victims to express feelings.• Accept your own limitations.

Page 24: First Aid for Colleges and Universities 10th Edition Chapter 28 © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Psychological Emergencies and Disasters Slide Presentation.

Conducting Triage

• Identify and treat the most severely injured first.• Assign victims to one of three categories

– Life threatening (highest priority)– Urgent (second priority)– Delayed (lowest priority)

• Affix tags to victims help identify priority.

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Page 25: First Aid for Colleges and Universities 10th Edition Chapter 28 © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Psychological Emergencies and Disasters Slide Presentation.

Three-Level Triage

• Highest priority– Critically injured; can recover if treated immediately

• Second priority– Seriously injured; may die without medical

intervention

• Lowest priority– Either noncritical wounds, or mortal wounds unlikely

to respond to treatment

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Page 26: First Aid for Colleges and Universities 10th Edition Chapter 28 © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Psychological Emergencies and Disasters Slide Presentation.

Two-Level Triage

• First priority– Those with life-threatening injuries that are

salvageable– Those requiring immediate care to survive

• Second priority– Those with serious injuries but whose lives are not

threatened– Those with minor injuries– Those whose critical injuries are not treatable or

salvageable

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Page 27: First Aid for Colleges and Universities 10th Edition Chapter 28 © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Psychological Emergencies and Disasters Slide Presentation.

Summary

• The primary goal in a psychological emergency is to help the patient function normally as soon as possible.

• Physical emergencies can cause psychological emergencies.

• Take suicide threats seriously at all times.• Handle violent victims with multiple rescuers.• Always get victim consent and use good

documentation skills.

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.