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AUTISMO TEA PDF

AUTISMO TEA PDF
TRASTORNO ESPECTRO AUTISMO y URGENCIAS PDF

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Nota Importante

Aunque pueda contener afirmaciones, datos o apuntes procedentes de instituciones o profesionales sanitarios, la información contenida en el blog EMS Solutions International está editada y elaborada por profesionales de la salud. Recomendamos al lector que cualquier duda relacionada con la salud sea consultada con un profesional del ámbito sanitario. by Dr. Ramon REYES, MD

Niveles de Alerta Antiterrorista en España. Nivel Actual 4 de 5.

Niveles de Alerta Antiterrorista en España. Nivel Actual 4 de 5.
Fuente Ministerio de Interior de España

lunes, 15 de abril de 2019

Mass civilian shootings: Are we ready to face this new threat?

Mass civilian shootings: Are we ready to face this new threat?


COL A Puidupin (MD), CPT C Hoffmann (MD),CPT N Cazes (MD), COL S Margerin (PCD), LTC T Provost-Fleury (MD), LTC O Gacia (MD) French Armed Forces Health Service, Paris, Clamart, Marseille

Link to download a free PDF document 



Related 







The Hartford Consensus III Compendium, September 2015. PHTLS B-Con Bleeding Control for the Injured Course "Stop The Bleed" / Control de Sangrados para el Herido By NAEMT.



First Responder Guide for Improving Survivability in Improvised Explosive Device and/or Active Shooter Incidents / Guía DHS para mejorar la supervivencia de primeros respondientes a un incidente a dispositivo explosivo improvisado y tiroteos activos














The Committee for Tactical Emergency Casualty Care used the military battlefield guidelines of Tactical Combat Casualty Care (TCCC) as an evidenced based starting point in the development of civilian specific medical guidelines for high threat operations. Each phase and medical recommendation of the military TCCC guidelines was examined and discussed by the Committee, and then was re-written, annotated, or removed through consensus voting of the Guidelines Committee to create civilian specific, civilian appropriate guidance. Additionally, the Committee added and/or put specific emphasis on several medical recommendations not included in TCCC to address high threat operational aspects unique to civilian operations.

The first phase of care under TCCC is Care Under Fire (CUF). To meet the various operational scenarios and terminology utilized in the civilian sector, the first phase of care under TECC was renamed “Direct Threat Care (DTC).” The priorities of DTC remain relatively unchanged from CUF; emphasis remains on mitigating the threat, moving the wounded to cover or an area of relative safety, and managing massive hemorrhage utilizing tourniquets. Additionally, emphasis was placed on the importance of various rescue and patient movement techniques, as well as rapid positional airway management if operationally feasible. Treatment and operational requirements are the same for all levels of providers during this phase of care.

The second phase of care under TCCC is Tactical Field Care. For the same reasons listed above, this phase was renamed in TECC to be called “Indirect Threat Care.” Indirect Threat Care phase can be initiated once the casualty is in an of relative safety, such as one with proper cover or one that has been cleared but not secured where there is less of chance of rescuers being injured or patients sustaining additional injuries. Similar to TCCC, assessment and treatment priorities in this phase focus on the preventable causes of death as defined by military medical evidence: Major Hemorrhage, Airway, Breathing/Respirations, Circulation, Head & Hypothermia, and Everything Else (MARCHE). Four different levels of providers were assigned to scope of practice and skill sets based on level of training and certification.

The final phase of care under TECC is called “Evacuation Care.” During this phase of care, an effort is being made to move the casualty toward a definitive treatment facility. Most additional interventions during this phase of care are similar to those performed during normal EMS operations.  However, major emphasis is placed on reassessment of interventions and hypothermia management.

Download the TECC Guidlines »




Almost 90% of American service men and women who die from combat wounds do so before they arrive at a medical treatment facility. This figure highlights the importance of the trauma care provided on the battlefield by combat medics, corpsmen, PJs, and even the casualties themselves and their fellow combatants. With respect to the actual care provided by combat medics on the battlefield, however, J. S Maughon noted in his paper in Military Medicine in 1970 that little had changed in the preceding 100 years. In the interval between the publication of Maughon's paper and the United States’ invasion of Afghanistan in 2001, there was also little progress made. The war years, though, have seen many lifesaving advances in battlefield trauma care pioneered by the Joint Trauma System and the Committee on Tactical Combat Casualty Care. These advances have dramatically increased casualty survival. This is especially true when all members of combat units – not just medics - are trained in Tactical Combat Casualty Care (TCCC.)

Combat medical personnel and non-medical combatants in U.S. and most coalition militaries are now being trained to manage combat trauma on the battlefield in accordance with TCCC Guidelines.

Articles

Podcasts

Improving Active Shooter/ Hostile Event Response Best Practices and Recommendations for Integrating Law Enforcement, Fire, and EMS (Interagency Board, September 2015)

Fire/Emergency Medical Services Department Operational Considerations and Guide for Active Shooter and Mass Casualty Incidents FEMA

Fire/Emergency Medical Services Department Operational Considerations and Guide for Active Shooter and Mass Casualty Incidents FEMA 
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First Responder Guide for Improving Survivability in Improvised Explosive Device and/or Active Shooter Incidents / Guía DHS para mejorar la supervivencia de primeros respondientes a un incidente a dispositivo explosivo improvisado y tiroteos activos

First Responder Guide for Improving Survivability in Improvised Explosive Device and/or Active Shooter Incidents / Guía DHS para mejorar la supervivencia de primeros respondientes a un incidente de dispositivo explosivo improvisado y tiroteos activos


Link to download PDF for Free


FREE PDF: First Responder Guide for Improving Survivability in Improvised Explosive Device and/or Active Shooter Incidents / Guía DHS para mejorar la supervivencia de primeros respondientes a un incidente a dispositivo explosivo improvisado y tiroteos activos 
Bajar en el enlace http://goo.gl/L7J3LR

Cortesía
EMS España / Emergency Medical Services en España
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Handbook for EMS Medical Directors by FEMA 2012 pdf

Handbook for EMS Medical Directors by FEMA 2012 pdf 

DOWNLOAD


UNTIL THE HELP ARRIVE instructor guide Version 2.0 by FEMA Uniformed Services University PPT and PDf

https://www.fema.gov/media-library/assets/documents/167623



Until Help Arrives 




for the Until Help Arrives course, designed to teach students basic skills to keep people with life-threatening injuries alive until professional help arrives.






Tactical Emergency Medical Support (TEMS) Protocols Prehospital Emergency Care Protocols Homeland Security free Pdf

Tactical Emergency Medical Support (TEMS) Protocols Prehospital Emergency Care Protocols Homeland Security free Pdf


Link to DOWNLOAD

jueves, 11 de abril de 2019

The LTP (Lateral Trauma Position) Why Should You Put Some Trauma Patients on Their Side?

The LTP (Lateral Trauma Position)  Why Should You Put Some Trauma Patients on Their Side?

The LTP (Lateral Trauma Position)
2015 New Hampshire EMS Protocol 4.5 – Spinal Trauma says, “Patients with nausea or vomiting may be placed in a lateral recumbent position. Maintain neutral head position with manual stabilization, padding/pillows, and/or patient’s arm.” The protocol cited above gives us the option to put a patient on their side while maintaining neutral head position in a situation involving nausea or vomiting.
One of the technique is the Norwegian Lateral Trauma Position (LTP). The goal is to transport a trauma patient who is at risk for airway compromise on their side while making reasonable attempts to maintain inline stabilization of the spine and minimize movement.
Don’t do things without authorization from protocols, medical direction, administration – and you know, the legal stuff.
Why Should You Put Some Trauma Patients on Their Side?

Our practice in EMS for decades has been to strap trauma patients to a rigid longboard in a supine position. This has been thought to protect the spine from further injury. We’ve all gotten pretty good at performing that technique, so we’re comfortable doing it.
Unfortunately that comfort is not shared by the patient. Being secured to a ongboard is not comfortable, it’s painful, and it can cause harm to the patient. Furthermore, there is no evidence that it actually makes a difference in patient outcome. So numerous EMS leaders are creating a sea change in EMS across the USA to stop using rigid longboards in the transport of trauma patients.




In 2014-2015 statewide protocols in several New England states took longboards out of the routine care for patients with potential or actual spine trauma. Anecdotal evidence to this point looks very good. However, did we give up anything useful by stopping the practice of transporting patients strapped to a backboard? Let’s think about airway management for a minute. Picture this, you’re in the back of the ambulance with a patient on a backboard. The patient starts to vomit. A lot. How did you manage that? Your suction device wasn’t going to help in this scenario, so as quickly as you could you undid the straps and rolled the patient and backboard up on its side. Gravity then saved the day.

Same scenario, but now we’re NOT transporting the patient on the backboard. How can you roll this patient up on their side and still maintain alignment of the spine? You probably can’t. However airway and breathing come before disability so you do the best you can.
Our state protocols recognize this potential scenario, and say if you think your patient is at risk for vomiting, you should transport them on their side. The language from the 2015 New Hampshire EMS Protocol 4.5 – Spinal Trauma says, “Patients with nausea or vomiting may be placed in a lateral recumbent position. Maintain neutral head position with manual stabilization, padding/pillows, and/or patient’s arm.”


But, but, but, I can’t do that… a trauma patient HAS to be transported supine. Right?
Dogma is defined by the Merriam-Webster dictionary as “a belief or set of beliefs that is accepted by the members of a group without being questioned or doubted”. Maybe the paradigm of transporting every trauma patient in a supine position is dogma that needs to be reconsidered.
The protocol cited above gives us the option to put a patient on their side while maintaining neutral head position in a situation involving nausea or vomiting. This means proactively doing so before initiating transport. THIS IS A VERY GOOD IDEA. There are clearly patients that you can anticipate that vomiting may be in their near future, and you should proactively take steps to deal with it. If endotracheal intubation with RSI, is in your scope of practice that may be the path you take, but transporting the patient on their side may be just as effective and certainly less invasive.
So again, putting a trauma patient who is at risk for aspiration on their side for transport rather than transporting them supine is a very good idea. However we need to do this in a manner that still maintains an inline stabilization of the spine. How do you do that? Good question.
That’s the challenge this project seeks to address. We would like to have a technique that can accomplish that objective.

The Norwegian Lateral Trauma Position


Fortunately our EMS colleagues in Norway developed and have been utilizing a technique called the Lateral Trauma Position for over a decade, with success. What we seek to do here at the LateralTraumaPosition.org project is to take what the Norwegian EMS system started, and help our EMS colleagues in the USA develop this skill. We hope to provide you with information that can help you form your own clinical opinion and your own clinical practice.
This website includes a video that was produced by EMS providers in Norway illustrating the lateral trauma position (LTP) as they practice it. We’ve also included research studies that attempt to determine the effectiveness and safety of the technique. We believe that our practice in EMS should be based on evidence when possible. The current evidence on the LTP isn’t that strong, no randomized controlled trials. But the evidence is growing. This is thanks to the leadership of Dr. Per Kristian Hyldmo, a flight physician for the helicopter EMS system in Norway. We highly admire his work and hope to follow in his footsteps.
The demonstration videos in this website show the LTP as we have worked out the bugs for us. We wouldn’t presume to say this is the only way to do it. What we do say is that EMS providers need to practice a technique that accomplishes the goal, which is to transport a trauma patient who is at risk for airway compromise on their side while making reasonable attempts to maintain inline stabilization of the spine and minimize movement.
We suggest your team starts with our techniques, modifies the techniques to what works for you, then practice it. A lot.
Listen, for years and years we practiced the PHTLS technique of a standing takedown onto a long backboard, right? Well our evolving practice appears to be doing away with that technique, but we should practice the new LTP technique with the same fervor.
So we ask you to review our “how to” videos, practice them with your crews, modify them to suit your needs and your equipment, and get really good at it. We’d really appreciate your feedback and your modifications of the techniques, including photos and videos.
Finally, understand that we’re not holding ourselves out as experts on the topic of spinal immobilization. We are not researchers. We are simply partners in trying to develop an effective technique in the setting of changing protocols and clinical practices.
Oh, and don’t do things without authorization from protocols, medical direction, administration – you know, the legal stuff.
Be safe,
The LateralTraumaPosition.org Team

Daños de un atropeyo segun la velocidad. Infografia

Daños de un atropeyo segun la velocidad. Infografia
NO SOLO EN SEMANA SANTA DEBES DE SER UN BUEN CONDUCTOR

Ley No. 63-17, de Movilidad, Transporte Terrestre, Tránsito y Seguridad Vial de la República Dominicana. G. O. No. 10875 del 24 de febrero de 2017.

https://emssolutionsint.blogspot.com/2019/01/ley-no-63-17-de-movilidad-transporte.html



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sábado, 6 de abril de 2019

MODELO DE PLAN DE CONTINGENCIA Para Estados Municipios y Delegaciones pdf Gratis 

Enlace para DESCARGAR


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Guía para la elaboración de Programas de Protección Civil y Planes de Contingencias. Para Estados, Municipios y Delegaciones. MEXICO pdf Gratis

Guía para la elaboración de Programas de Protección Civil y Planes de Contingencias. Para Estados, Municipios y Delegaciones. MEXICO pdf Gratis

Enlace para DESCARGAR 







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martes, 2 de abril de 2019

The European guideline on management of major bleeding and coagulopathy following trauma: fifth edition 2019 FREE pdf

The European guideline on management of major bleeding and coagulopathy following trauma: fifth edition 2019 FREE pdf 

The appropriate management of trauma patients with massive bleeding and coagulopathy remains a major challenge in routine clinical practice. A multidisciplinary approach and adherence to evidence-based guidance are key to improving patient outcomes, which could now be shown in the first outcome studies.

DOWNLOAD free pdf 

read full articule 


Check if is updated

https://media.springernature.com/full/springer-static/image/art%3A10.1186%2Fs13054-019-2347-3/MediaObjects/13054_2019_2347_Fig1_HTML.png

Fig. 2
a Summary of treatment modalities for the bleeding trauma patients included in this guideline. CT, computed tomography; FAST, focused assessment with sonography in trauma; Hb, haemoglobin; PT, prothrombin time. b Summary of treatment modalities for the bleeding trauma patients included in this guideline. FFP, fresh frozen plasma; Hb, haemoglobin; RBC, red blood cells; TBI, traumatic brain injury; TXA, tranexamic acid. cSummary of treatment modalities for the bleeding trauma patients included in this guideline. APA, antiplatelet agent; APTT, activated partial thromboplastin time; FFP, fresh frozen plasma; FXIII, factor XIII; PCC, prothrombin complex concentrate; PT, prothrombin time; rFVIIa, recombinant activated coagulation factor VII; TBI, traumatic brain injury; TXA, tranexamic acid

https://media.springernature.com/full/springer-static/image/art%3A10.1186%2Fs13054-019-2347-3/MediaObjects/13054_2019_2347_Fig2a_HTML.png

https://media.springernature.com/full/springer-static/image/art%3A10.1186%2Fs13054-019-2347-3/MediaObjects/13054_2019_2347_Fig2b_HTML.png

https://media.springernature.com/full/springer-static/image/art%3A10.1186%2Fs13054-019-2347-3/MediaObjects/13054_2019_2347_Fig2c_HTML.png



SUBITUS International 
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