Okay, bear in mind that the following is for SCENARIOLAND only. A place distantly moved from real life. With Unicorns and rainbows.
Also, this is what I was taught and others may feel that the info is incorrect. Who knows. My instructors said they never lie
1. Is it definitively 162mg total ASA?
Yes*
What if they have dosed themselves earlier?
In Scenarioland they wont have. Real world - 160mg is a minute amount really. I was taught to give the lowest dose of the range. You need to know the dose range for the written exam, but for the practical it's the lowest dose. You wont need to re-dose as they should miraculously get better or suddenly keel over and need CPR. That would suck as you need CPR sequencing dialed or its a free ticket to Failtown.
2. How much time passes between the ventolin and atrovent (Salbutamol/Ipratropium Bromide) doses?
Scenarioland? See above - they will miraculously get better unless the examiner hates you for some reason. Do not annoy the examiner.
For example the adult guideline says 6-20 sprays 100mcg/spray. Are those all at once, if not how much time passes between dosing?
Scenarioland? Just say that you would give 6 sprays. Done. Wipe hands on pants. I believe in real life you'd chain them fairly close together.
3. Do you give all 20 sprays of ventolin if they need it THEN move to atrovent?
The patient has what the patient has (make sure you say you're bringing along the pt.s personal effects
including medications before you leave scene!). I've not heard of a Pt in Scenarioland having both, but I've not heard of all the permutations of the scenarios they have. But I was told that in the unlikely event of a pt having both, then yes Ventolin goes first as it bronchodilates, while Atrovent helps maintain the opening of the airway etc, but would suck to be you as you'd have to give all the spiel about Side effects/indications/contras/etc for each drug. This seems so unlikely as it would take ages and the examiner wants to get out of there as much as you do.
Also, if they had both meds as prescriptions, it'd be 6 sprays of Ventolin, then 4 sprays of Atrovent. Aint gonna happen.
I have heard of a Scenario where the Pt is asthmatic, having an attack, but forgot their inhaler. Fortunately their friend is there and offers their one. Sneaky buggers - you do that and it's insta-fail! It must be the pt's meds ^_^
4. During RTC / non-rtc are the vitals every 5/15?
If it's a critical patient (which it most likely will be, as they're more interesting) then it's every 5 mins. Allegedly there are some stay 'n' stabilize pt scenarios but I've not met anyone who's had that. Allegedly there is/maybe one childbirth scenario in there. Sucks to be that guy.
5. At what point do we give glucose? Ours is < 4.0 bgl, but I think I read somewhere it's 3.8 in Alberta. Is that correct?
Alberta protocols say normal is 3.8 - 7.0 mmol. My midterm was a pt with a BGL of 2.0 so it was pretty obvious. I believe that they have to be a confirmed diabetic with a abnormally low BGL to qualify for Glucose. A regular dude with low BGL doesn't count. I think it would be paranoid to expect a scenario where they have:
No Hx of Diabetes, BGL 3.6 etc.
5b. Do we take BGL on every set of baseline vitals even if the Pt is non hypo/hyperglycemic?
My school taught us to. Scenarioland =/ real life
*According to what I was taught
Hope this helps! I feel confident in the above info, but I'm not an examiner and I had plenty of, er, discussions with Instructors about conflicting sources of information. Screw it, just dont miss anything huge like applying a C-Collar and you'll be fine. Probably
