LIFEGUARDAVIDAS
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Hi again, I wanted to have your opinion and experience about providing emergency pre-hospital care to victims and patients who are underage (1
, without having a parent, legal guardian or other person responsible for him/her present at the scene.
As a lifeguard, I was trained to asume that, if present, the parent/legal guardian would want me to provide care. -Similar to the legal considerations with an unconcious person (if he/she would be able to ask for help... he/she would and therefore I would have his/her consent to help).
During the PHTLS course, some participants were EMTs, other were EMT-Paramedics, three RNs, an EDT and me. During one of the example cases, involving a kid, each responded according to their agency policies and of course there were many discrepancies.
I am not going to base my response in future cases on the results of your replies, of course, but I am very interested in knowing both: your agency policy, and your personal opinion.
_____________
In my case, last American summer, at the summer camp where I work, one of the campers got his left foot stucked into a hook (caribiner type) between two toes. That happenned at the top of the slide since the hook was one of many that were holding the canvas slide to the wooden platform.
I was called by the lifeguard working the slide and upon my arrival I found out what was happenning. Due to the design of the caribiner and its effect (like a fishing hook), removing it would have made the kid enter into shock and probably left permanent damage. So... since the slide was made of canvas, we were able to cut it around the hook, and in that way transport the camper to the hospital without removing the hook. Both the lifeguards, the camp doctor and the nurse agreed that surgery would be the best way to remove it.
One of the advantages of working in a camp compared with a public beach, is that each camper has a medical history sheet containing (among other stuff) the camper's emergency contact numbers. This wasn't the exception. However, we weren't able to contact the parents on the phone until we were already in the ER. The specialist surgeon was on his way, the kid was really fantastic, and only a minor cut was going to be necessary to extract the hook. BUT... While talking to the kid's mother, the camp doctor found out both parents were doctors. (To make it worse, in "high positions"). Anyways, they wanted the hospital staff to wait for their arrival before treating their son. -One minor detail: they were 5 hrs. away.
Both the camp and the hospital doctors were unable to convince the mother to let them treat her son. 2 hrs. later while the mother was on the road (3hrs. more to reach the hospital) she agreed that they could treat him as long as "before and after" photos of the injury were taken. So after getting a disposable camera, luckily, no permanent damage to the kid's foot was the end of the story.
I was really surprised of the mother's reaction. -Since inspite of the incident, the only thing that could have had left permanent damage was the "temporary refusal of care"!
I know what some of you could think (it's because I don't have kids yet...). But as a doctor's son I can tell you that it's a bad mix: they are the patient's parents and, as doctors, they know all what could go wrong.
Back to the consent issue, on the way to the hospital, I recommended to the camp doctor to contact the camper's parents after he was already getting treated at the hospital. -Precisely to avoid what happenned from happenning. According to my training, the law was on our side, since we were able to asume that the parents would have given us consent. Of course the camp doctor did the opposite.<_<
__________
So if you had similar cases, comment on your agency policy, or just give your opinions... I would be very interested in reading them.
Thank you in advance for reading this!

As a lifeguard, I was trained to asume that, if present, the parent/legal guardian would want me to provide care. -Similar to the legal considerations with an unconcious person (if he/she would be able to ask for help... he/she would and therefore I would have his/her consent to help).
During the PHTLS course, some participants were EMTs, other were EMT-Paramedics, three RNs, an EDT and me. During one of the example cases, involving a kid, each responded according to their agency policies and of course there were many discrepancies.
I am not going to base my response in future cases on the results of your replies, of course, but I am very interested in knowing both: your agency policy, and your personal opinion.
_____________
In my case, last American summer, at the summer camp where I work, one of the campers got his left foot stucked into a hook (caribiner type) between two toes. That happenned at the top of the slide since the hook was one of many that were holding the canvas slide to the wooden platform.
I was called by the lifeguard working the slide and upon my arrival I found out what was happenning. Due to the design of the caribiner and its effect (like a fishing hook), removing it would have made the kid enter into shock and probably left permanent damage. So... since the slide was made of canvas, we were able to cut it around the hook, and in that way transport the camper to the hospital without removing the hook. Both the lifeguards, the camp doctor and the nurse agreed that surgery would be the best way to remove it.
One of the advantages of working in a camp compared with a public beach, is that each camper has a medical history sheet containing (among other stuff) the camper's emergency contact numbers. This wasn't the exception. However, we weren't able to contact the parents on the phone until we were already in the ER. The specialist surgeon was on his way, the kid was really fantastic, and only a minor cut was going to be necessary to extract the hook. BUT... While talking to the kid's mother, the camp doctor found out both parents were doctors. (To make it worse, in "high positions"). Anyways, they wanted the hospital staff to wait for their arrival before treating their son. -One minor detail: they were 5 hrs. away.
Both the camp and the hospital doctors were unable to convince the mother to let them treat her son. 2 hrs. later while the mother was on the road (3hrs. more to reach the hospital) she agreed that they could treat him as long as "before and after" photos of the injury were taken. So after getting a disposable camera, luckily, no permanent damage to the kid's foot was the end of the story.
I was really surprised of the mother's reaction. -Since inspite of the incident, the only thing that could have had left permanent damage was the "temporary refusal of care"!
I know what some of you could think (it's because I don't have kids yet...). But as a doctor's son I can tell you that it's a bad mix: they are the patient's parents and, as doctors, they know all what could go wrong.
Back to the consent issue, on the way to the hospital, I recommended to the camp doctor to contact the camper's parents after he was already getting treated at the hospital. -Precisely to avoid what happenned from happenning. According to my training, the law was on our side, since we were able to asume that the parents would have given us consent. Of course the camp doctor did the opposite.<_<
__________
So if you had similar cases, comment on your agency policy, or just give your opinions... I would be very interested in reading them.
Thank you in advance for reading this!
