Use of Advanced Bleeding Control Mechanisms in Athletic Training: A Shift in the Thought Process of Prehospital Care—Part 1: Tourniquets
Author(s) -
David Berry,
S. Robert Seitz,
Ellen K. Payne
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
athletic training education journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1947-380X
DOI - 10.4085/0903142
Subject(s) - medicine , pulse oximetry , athletic training , wound care , intensive care medicine , medical emergency , anesthesia , physical therapy
Two other competencies(Table 1), although not necessarily new to the list ofimmediate emergency management care skills, do requirefurther examination based on the current available scienceand standard of care in prehospital medicine. The purposeof this column is to provide athletic training educators(ATE) with evidence regarding the use of tourniquets in theprehospital setting as well as to be a resource on how toteach the management of external hemorrhage usingtourniquets.Trauma resulting in disruption of soft tissue is classified asan open or closed wound, and any significant loss ofintravascular volume may lead sequentially to hemodynam-ic instability, decreased tissue perfusion, cellular hypoxia,organ damage, and death.
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