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- Newsgroups: rec.backcountry
- Path: sparky!uunet!psinntp!openwx!bonn
- From: bonn@networx.com (David Bonn)
- Subject: Re: FIRST-AIDS KITS
- Message-ID: <1992Nov23.180726.29306@networx.com>
- Sender: usenet@networx.com (Usenet News Account)
- Organization: NetWorx
- X-Newsreader: TIN [version 1.1 PL6]
- References: <1egij6INNm1@grapevine.EBay.Sun.COM>
- Date: Mon, 23 Nov 1992 18:07:26 GMT
- Lines: 37
-
- greg@antizen.EBay.Sun.COM wrote:
- : >Realistically, most major-league medical emergencies cannot be effectively
- : >treated in a wilderness situations. The best you can realistically hope for
- : >is to make sure no additional damage is done while waiting for rescue.
- : >Something to think about when you're heading to some secret place.
- :
- : Again, this depends on your level of training and commitment....
- :
-
- I suppose it depends on your idea of "major-league medical emergency" and
- "effective treatment."
-
- Serious blood loss can't be effectively treated outside of the hospital (I have
- never seen anyone carrying whole blood or even plasma, much less a MAST suit).
- This means that quite plausible injuries like femur fractures, pelvic
- fractures, ectopic pregnancies, serious burns, and intra-abdominal bleeding
- could well be fatal, no matter how skilled and dedicated the people treating
- the patient happen to be.
-
- Head and spinal injuries are also pretty hopeless. As are most cases of
- cardiac arrest (two important exceptions: cold-water immersion (drowning)
- and being struck by lightning).
-
- This doesn't mean that all of these problems are effectively fatal (okay,
- cardiac arrest due to trauma is pretty darned fatal in the wilderness). What
- it does mean is that you need to get your patient to a hospital sooner than
- immediately if your patient (friend, SO, co-worker) is going to live. Beyond
- that, you need to prevent any further damage (this is what 'first aid' is all
- about) and cross your fingers.
-
- There is a lot of knowledge and technology available in a hospital emergency
- room. You can't possibly carry even a tiny portion of it in your brain or on
- your back.
-
- David Bonn
- bonn@networx.com
-
-