Hello, I was wondering in case this is asked on the NREMT exam, what comes first?
Once you arrive on scene what do you do first, do you notify dispatcher that you have arrived on scene or do you examine the area for safety(scene is safe)? And right after that you do BSI/standard precaution right
I don't recall this being a question, or part of a question on either of my tests (basic or intermediate, classroom test or final exam), so don't get hung up on it. Trying to memorize everything in order really messes me up on testing. You know A B C D E and F need to happen in order, but on the test they leave out B and D, so now your sitting there trying to refigure a new order because you know B and D are important also.
It really is hard to answer your question, for me anyway. If you know your going to a unsafe scene, then you are talking with dispatch and officers long before you arrive, so when you arrive you know your scene is safe, cause if not you wouldn't be there yet. It is important to let dispatch know you are on scene incase things become unsafe again.
But you may be responding to a "normal" call where there is no reason to suspect an unsafe scene. Wife calls 911 cause husband has low blood sugar. No other info from dispatch because they had disconnected from the wife, PD isn't coming because they are busy and it isn't emergent. You pull in the drive, tell dispatch your on scene, and head inside. During the time of call and arrival husband has become combative, and is so altered he has grabbed a gun, NOW your scene is very unsafe. As your running to the rig, your calling dispatch for officers. Once in the rig your letting them know you are leaving the scene until PD arrives, and you call back onscene once officers have said it is safe.
Bottom line, makes sure your scene is safe from the moment you get the call until the moment you transfer care to the ER. Always let dispatch know where you are at, there may be times when they are the only ones that can help you.