What is meant by Internal Disaster was when the buildings actually started emploding [collapsing upon themselves] killing and/or trapping thousands of people inside. This is your INTERNAL DISASTER. You know more than you can handle will be hurt and or dead. What do you do? You are the head of the INTERNAL DISASTER MANAGEMENT TEAM. When a disaster happens INSIDE and enclosed place with lots of people, you help the people that are least hurt first. The reason being, so that they can possible help you, with the other survivors or you have very little time and you know you can move the victim and they have a chance to survive. In an INTERNAL DISASTER help and survival are KEY.
How does this differ from a disaster from which they are now coming to your hospital? Now, we take all the people from the World Trade Center and now, they are start coming to your hospital. Of course, now you are over loaded. It is up to you as the triage nurse NOW to see the most traumatized person FIRST. The rest can wait. Once they are at their destination of medical care, the gear shifts, you help the more tramatized patient first to ensure their chances of survival.
An EXTERNAL DISASTER can also be known as a NATURAL DISASTER in some cases. This involves a disaster that occurs outside the hospital as well such as a plane crash, or a train wreck ect. To summarize the three types of disasters: an INTERNAL DISASTER is a large number of people wounded/hurt/dead in an enclosed place be it inside or outside. [ie: 9/11 with the explosion of the twin towers in New York or the Pentagon in Washington]. An EXTERNAL DISASTER is a disaster away from a medical center and it is "man made". [ie: Plan crash, train wreck or casualties of war].
In a NATURAL DISASTER, say the San Diago Bridge collapses or there is a giant volcano ect. Still use the same rule as in the 2001 ect above. Help the people off the bridge [the least wounded] before the bridge collapses. The goal here is to save lives. You can not do anything about the people whose cars have already fallen into the ocean or for the people to whom the fire has already engulfed. Once, you get the people into a save distance, then you do the whole triage thing helping the most wounded.
Does that make it any clearer? Please continue to ask your questions. This is an important area of discussion. My goal personally, is not to answer the actual questions. You will never pass the nclex memorizing questions. We must understand CONCEPTS to pass the NCLEX.
Now, let us move on to delegating in terms of triage:
How do you prioritize in a disaster? Remember the word T-R-I-A-G-E. Trauma, R=respiratory, Intracranial pressure & mental status, An infection, GI-upper, Elimination-lower. In that order. Prioritizing, starting with trauma first and lower GI injuries last. You will not need to know how to tag for the nclex but I place this here so that you can understand the concept.
Triage is a French
verb that
means "to sort". The goal of triage is
to do the greatest good for
the greatest numbers of individuals. This
is accomplished by having a
system to quickly assess each patient,
categorize and prioritize
them
according to their needs. Be sure to
evaluate the hazards before
entering an area to perform triage.
Triage should be initiated
whenever there are more injured persons
than rescuers.
The four (4) triage
categories
and a description of their meanings
are:
• Green is the lowest
priority
and is used for walking wounded or
patients who may not need to
go to the hospital. Patients in this
category may have minor
musculoskeletal
or soft tissue injures. They
can wait for treatment and/or
transport until all other patients have
been removed from the scene.
• Moving up the tag,
yellow
is the next category and is used for
patients who definitely need
to go to a hospital, but not
immediately. These patients
have injuries that are serious but not
life-threatening, such as
burns
without airway problems, major or
multiple bone or joint
injuries,
and back injuries without spinal
cord damage. These patients
will be treated and transported after the
critical (or red-tagged)
patients
have been taken to trauma centers
or hospitals.
• The highest priority is
red,
and it is used for critically-injured patients with treatable
life-threatening
injuries or illnesses. This
might include airway and
breathing
difficulties, decreased mental
status, and uncontrolled
bleeding.
These patients will be treated and
transported from the scene
first.
• The final category is
black
and it is used for dead and
unsalvageable patients such
as someone in cardiac arrest. These
victims will be removed from
the scene, but only after all of the
living/salvageable patients.
START Now
METTAGs in hand, you now
begin
the tremendous responsibility of
organizing the chaos. Simple
Triage And Rapid Treatment, or START, is
a triage system that was
developed
in California in the early 1980s. It is simple and fast, requiring less
than sixty seconds for each patient. It does not require any special
assessment
or diagnostic tools. EMTs do not need a blood pressure cuff, a
stethoscope
or even a penlight. The system provides for rapid life saving
stabilization
such as airway control and bleeding control, but excludes CPR.
A word here about
cardiopulmonary
resuscitation: CPR is not performed
in these situations because
two or three rescuers would be required
to treat a single patient
whose
probability of survival (in the
chaos) is zero-to-none. On
the other hand, those same two or three
rescuers could play an
important
role in treating five, ten, or maybe
even more patients.
How to Start
The first (and easiest) thing
you must do is separate the walking
wounded from the other
victims
with more severe injuries. This can be
done by shouting slowly and
clearly or using a bullhorn. Designate an
area for walking wounded and
instruct anyone who can walk to get up
and move to that area. (Note:
Some victims may be unwilling to leave
their friends or family
members
who are ill or injured; permit them
to stay as they can help you
with managing the patient.) The theory
here is that if a person can
walk, he does not need immediate medical
care. Green-tagged patients
will not be ignored. Rather, they will be
further assessed and treated
when all of the red and yellow patients
have been treated and/or
transported
and resources become available
to take care of them.
All of the patients in
this
area are considered to be "green tags."
Later you will return to the
"green" area and "officially" tag them
but only after you have
triaged
the red and yellow victims. With this
green group in a separate
(safe)
location, you are well on the way to
being organized.
Evaluating the
Remaining
Victims
The next step is to triage
the remaining victims. By evaluating
respiration, perfusion and
mental status, you sort and separate them
into three categories which
give the greatest priority to those
victims who are most
critically
injured, and have the greatest chance
of survival. Let's quickly
review our color-coded tags:
• Red Tag: those victims
whose
injuries are life-threatening and
must be immediately treated
and transported.
• Yellow Tag: those whose
injuries
will allow for delayed
treatment and transport.
• Black Tag: those who are dead or unsalvageable.
How do we make that determination? RPM.
R = Respirations
The first assessment is
for
presence and rate of respiration (RPM).
Is the victim breathing? If
there is no respiratory effort,
reposition his head and
reassess.
If there is still no respiratory
effort, the victim is
considered
"dead/non-salvageable." Apply a
black tag and move on to the
next victim.
What if he is breathing?
Assess
the rate. If the rate is above 30
breaths-per-minute, the
patient
is critical and requires immediate
care. (Remember from your
EMT-B
class that a respiratory rate above
30 and below eight
breaths-per-minute
(BPM) is not adequate to meet
the body's needs and may
quickly
progress to cellular death.) As
triage officer, however, you
do not stop to ventilate this patient!
He is given a red tag and you
move on to the next victim. You do not
need to complete any other
components of the START assessment on this
patient.
If the patient requires
simple
airway maintenance (e.g. manual head
positioning), you will need
to assign someone to this task. If no
emergency service personnel
are available, remember that you have a
pool of human resources in
the green tag area. If no one there is
available, you will need to
improvise by placing something under the
patient's head/neck to keep
the airway open. It should also be
noted here that airway
maintenance
might need to be done without standard
cervical spine precautions.
If the respiratory rate is
less than 30 breaths-per-minute, move on
to the next part of the
assessment
process.
P = Perfusion
The next step is to assess
for
Perfusion (RPM). As you may remember
from your EMT-B course or
core
refresher, perfusion is the
circulation of blood within
an organ or tissue in adequate amounts to
meet the cells' current
needs.
If the body lacks adequate
perfusion
or circulation, cells,
tissues,
and organs will die.
How do we assess perfusion
in
victims at an MCS? Check for the
presence of radial pulses.
However, note that we are not concerned
with a pulse rate at this
time.
If the patient has no radial pulses,
he is critical and in
immediate
need of care. You apply a red tag to
the patient and move on to
the next patient.
If there are no radial
pulses,
there is no need to check for carotid
pulses. Why not? If the
patient
does not have a carotid pulse, then
he will also have no
respiratory
effort, and therefore, would have
been triaged as
dead/non-salvageable
in the previous step. Recall
also that the presence of a
radial pulse correlates to a systolic
blood pressure of at least
80 to 90 mmHg. If radial pulses are
present, move onto the next
assessment.
There is one other
assessment-finding
related to perfusion status
which must be mentioned here:
severe bleeding. Uncontrolled bleeding
is potentially life
threatening
and must be treated when found.
Again, you may have to
improvise
by using the cleanest piece of cloth
around which may not be
sterile.
Do not forget your human
resources
available in the green area.
Delegate someone to maintain
direct pressure on the wound and move on
to the next victim. Your job
remains triage.
M = Mentation
The third and final
assessment
is for Mentation (RPM) or mental
status. A patient who is
either
unconscious, or conscious but unable
to follow directions, is
critical
and requires immediate care. You
will apply a red tag to this
patient and move on to the next victim.
If the patient has a normal
level of consciousness and can follow
directions, he is not in
immediate
need of care and is triaged as
yellow.
As soon as a patient meets
any
one of the criteria for triage as
critical/immediate, you
should
apply a red tag, delegate someone to
provide rapid treatment (e.g.
maintain an airway or control
bleeding), stop any further
assessment and move on to the next
victim.
Any patient who makes it
through
all three assessments, without any
findings that would result
in triaging as critical/immediate, is
given a yellow tag. No triage
system is 100% fail safe. It is,
however, reasonable to
assume,
that a patient who cannot walk, but is
maintaining his own airway,
breathing at a rate less than 30 breaths-
per-minute, perfusing radial
pulses, has no sign of uncontrolled
bleeding and follows
commands,
is in need of medical attention at the
hospital, but can wait until
all of the critical/immediate (red tags)
are removed from the scene.
Secondary Triage
Let's quickly review how
START
integrates with the METTAG system.
• Anyone who gets up and
walks
to the designated area is given a
green tag (may not even
require
hospital care).
• Anyone who is not breathing
is given a black tag (dead/non-
salvageable).
• Anyone who fails one of the
RPM assessments is given a red tag
(critical/immediate).
• Anyone who cannot walk but
passes all of the assessments is
given a yellow tag (delayed).