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To Expose or Not To Expose, That is the Question.


spenac

Expose or Not  

18 members have voted

  1. 1. Expose or Not

    • Do not expose
      7
    • Expose but not palpate
      1
    • Expose and palpate as needed.
      10


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Otoscope? I would love to know how many prehospital providers use those. Anyway...

1.We report what we see. Let's pretend we did use an otoscope and see an inflamed tympanic membrane,and the person seems to have a case of otitis. We don't carry antibiotics, so what exactly do we do? We report this to the doc, and will he simply write a script, based on our findings, or will he also take a look? We could tell him we think- or a patient suspects- she is pregnant and is having abdominal pain, so will he order an ultrasound simply based on our word, or do you think he might confirm that pregnancy with a beta-HCG test?

2.I've never had a complaint either, but I also do not go beyond beyond my scope of practice. I do not pretend I spent 4 years in medical school plus a residency, plus having a whole tool box full of diagnostics.tests, procedures to confirm my diagnosis, nor do I have a definitive way to treat something like an ear infection, hemorrhoids, an STD, or PID. I can SUSPECT- and am usually correct- what may be going on with a patient, but unless I can definitively treat a condition- based on my training and available resources and protocols, I also stay within my well defined boundaries.

Actually, an ER doctor CAN "fix", or at least begin to mitigate many "cardiac" problems. If he runs his tests he may see no reason to immediately activate the cardiac cath team because the patient is suffering from a muscle strain, angina, or indigestion. He will probably call for a consult in such cases, but the person will also not be immediately rushed to the cath lab for an angiogram.

Again, we use our powers of observation, any tools we have, a detailed history, and an APPROPRIATE exam, and we can paint a very good picture of what we think may be going on. It's up to the doctor to confirm or shoot down our suspicions. I am very good at what I do, but I also do not expect ANY doctor- even ones that I have known and worked with for years- to simply accept what I say at face value.

3.God forbid- if anyone I know is sexually assaulted(barring a massive bleed), and I find out someone in EMS wanted to do a vaginal exam just because they want to prove they are a professional- I will be doing business with that provider.

First, we are not trained as ob/gyne's, we are not trained to look for, evaluate, or collect evidence, and we may very well even compromise a criminal case- and the benefit is only to the ego of the provider, not the patient. Good luck convincing an attorney that you are a "professional" while trying to justify why you did an internal or even cursory visual exam on a rape victim who is not in any way medically unstable or having massive trauma. Just be sure to provide the documentation of your rape advocate training, of your evidence technician background, and the protocols that allow you to do all this.

4.If someone is complaining of penile discharge, tell me exactly WHY I need to expose and evaluate that discharge? What benefit would that be to the patient? Will I be inserting a swab to obtain a C&S?

Will I be confirming a case of syphilis, chlamydia, or gonorhhea, while prescribing a course of antibiotics? I have no protocols for STD's in my system. Describe what the patient says with as many details as possible, evaluate their vitals, add any pertinent subjective data(appearance, demeanor, scene information, etc), and report your findings to the doctor. THAT is our job.

5.We are VERY different than the ER doc. In every way. In terms of training, skills, experience, available resources at our disposal, responsibility, and liability. The proper expert in our case is medical control- the person who wrote your protocols, the person on the other end of the radio, or the ER doc where you deliver your patient. He/she is the EXPERT in their field, and has far more training and tools at their disposal than we do. Would you simply take the word of some bystander who claims they are a medic, and tells you that the trauma patient you are called is not really injured? Would you walk away, would you base your care/treatment/transport based on their statements, or would you provide the care and treatment you are trained to do?

6.EMERGENCY medical services. That means we are trained to mitigate, fix, or maybe only transport- someone within very specific guidelines, in very specific situations, to obtain very specific- and generally temporary- outcomes.

1. Based on you saying you would not expose how can you report what you see when you actually did not see?

2.Doing a proper exam which includes seeing the area of complaint is not going outside our scope of practice.

3.Not sure where you jumped out there for that statement but we all know criminal cases are handled differently. If the patient presents in such away that exposure is needed and patient agrees they will be exposed.

4.Again if you did not see you can not accurately report what is happening with your patient. The argument that it does not change my care does not fly. If that were the case much of what we do in EMS would be done away with as either our findings will not change care or we will not be able to fix it anyway. Maybe we should just be taxi drivers?

5.But we are very similar in that we do exams that help guide our decisions as to where a patient needs to go or even as to what priority the patient is and those choices can greatly impact the final outcome for that patient. The ER doc does much the same yes with much greater education but he still does exams to determine next treatment or what specialist they need. I am no claiming we are equal just that for us to do our part in the medical chain requires we do a proper exam.

6. Emergency Medical indicates that we practice medicine to our level. In our level often it is being the first eyes and ears for the doctor so they can determine based off our report just how urgent treatment is needed. We visualize for life threats, we stabilize as allowed, we report our findings to assist continuation of care.

Our findings are not going to keep the doctor from doing their job but if we report it as minor it could put them way down the list to getting seen when in fact had we visualized we might have said something in the report that would tell the doctor hey this patient needs an even more focused exam ASAP so treatment can begin.

I do apologize if my method of delivery seems attacking that is not my intent. My intent is to get people to think outside their comfort zone for the benefit of our patients.

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1. Based on you saying you would not expose how can you report what you see when you actually did not see?

Triage is at the heart of what we do. In a multiple victim scenario, what do we do if a person complains of a sore finger? Do we do a complete 20 minute neuro exam, functional ability test, ROM, etc, or do we note the patient's complaint, classify him as nonemergent/green/etc, and move on? Same with someone who complains of a problem that we do not have the training, diagnostics, or permission to provide definitive treatment for. Do whatever is in the scope of our practice, and bring the person to a place who can properly assess and treat the patient. Does a triage nurse make a patient disrobe to verify they are having a vaginal bleed-with no obvious signs of excessive bleeding? Do they make a person display their hemorrhoids to confirm their existence and quantify their size before the person sees the doctor? Does that somehow make the triage nurse less of a professional, or not doing her job properly?

2.Doing a proper exam which includes seeing the area of complaint is not going outside our scope of practice.

Yes it is- if it is not in the proper context. Doing "more" is not always better, prudent, or even appropriate.

3.Not sure where you jumped out there for that statement but we all know criminal cases are handled differently. If the patient presents in such away that exposure is needed and patient agrees they will be exposed.

But we are supposed to be "professionals". That means that by gawd, we need to expose- because we CAN. After all, simply telling the doctor a woman was sexually assaulted is not enough. We need to verify that statement and examine her. What professional should be afraid of a bit of legal trouble?

4.Again if you did not see you can not accurately report what is happening with your patient. The argument that it does not change my care does not fly. If that were the case much of what we do in EMS would be done away with as either our findings will not change care or we will not be able to fix it anyway. Maybe we should just be taxi drivers?

Context. Proper time and place. I'm not big on mindlessly following orders without also engaging a bit of reason, logic, and common sense based on my experience and knowledge. That is what separates good providers from average ones.

5.But we are very similar in that we do exams that help guide our decisions as to where a patient needs to go or even as to what priority the patient is and those choices can greatly impact the final outcome for that patient. The ER doc does much the same yes with much greater education but he still does exams to determine next treatment or what specialist they need. I am no claiming we are equal just that for us to do our part in the medical chain requires we do a proper exam.

That's a big leap- from making decisions on the care we are trained to do, what we are allowed to perform, and where we transport to vs subjecting a patient to something for our own edification or an ego boost- especially when we KNOW that we have no way to definitively treat that person's problem or even alleviate their anxiety in any way. In fact, we would be making their unease even worse. Not happening.

In some cases, a "proper" exam may actually be no exam at all.

6. Emergency Medical indicates that we practice medicine to our level. In our level often it is being the first eyes and ears for the doctor so they can determine based off our report just how urgent treatment is needed. We visualize for life threats, we stabilize as allowed, we report our findings to assist continuation of care.

Exactly. So show me where in your statement that forcing someone to disrobe to see their hemorrhoids or purulent penile discharge fits into such a belief. I see no way how an STD or "piles" would ever be triaged as anything emergent, or even urgent.

Our findings are not going to keep the doctor from doing their job but if we report it as minor it could put them way down the list to getting seen when in fact had we visualized we might have said something in the report that would tell the doctor hey this patient needs an even more focused exam ASAP so treatment can begin.

No, but things like vitals or a pertinent history can and often DO change how a doctor does things. Don't worry doc- our head injury patient- I saw no blood in the ears with my otoscope, the fundi look clear, and I see no signs of a brain injury- that CT can wait for awhile. Come on- really? Our opinions are nice- and depending on your relationship with the local ER docs, they actually may carry SOME weight. BUT- and this is a big BUT- if that doctor does not essentially ignore what you said and do the exam himself, he is being irresponsible, bordering on malpractice. It is now HIS patient, and HIS license on the line, not yours. You get to say- oops, I did an exam, I didn;t see anything, but I guess I was wrong. Then again, I'm a paramedic or EMT, so that's also really not within my realm of responsibility. A doctor has no such luxuries.

I do apologize if my method of delivery seems attacking that is not my intent. My intent is to get people to think outside their comfort zone for the benefit of our patients.

Understood.

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Expose if pertinent to your imminent assessment and treatment. DO not expose if no purpose other than just to have a look-see. Testicular pain? Expose. Might be swelling, torsion, something indicating immediate surgery. You may need to speed along the ER a bit. Pelvic pain? History-->expose if indicated in history... do not expose for just any complaint of pelvic pain. History is the key here. Building patient trust leads to a more accurate history. Pelvic exams won't tell you if she's ectopic, PID, menstrual cycle, etc... that is something that requires a doctor's evaluation to definitively establish, and they will be looking for clues in the history first before performing any exams or tests.

Also remember that preserving patient dignity is paramount for us... where will they be most comfortable and who needs to see it the most? My answer: A hospital room, and the doctor. If it won't change your immediate course of treatment, and won't greatly add to the info you will be passing along from your assessment, don't do it.

Rectal bleeding? Not much you can do for it... and gross bleeding is evident... so don't expose, unless suspected trauma or obvious gross bleeding.

Spenac- I *like* you and I think it's dumb that you started this topic again. Round 2, same arguments, same viewpoint from you (always expose no matter what) and same people agreeing/disagreeing.

So... it's not just the spen-haters who are going to rag on you for this one. Sorry bud!

Wendy

CO EMT-B

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Not much you can do for it

Wow there it is again not much we can do for it. Or as others state it won't change treatment plan.

So then why do the basics take blood pressure? It will not change how they treat the patient, they can not raise or lower blood pressure.

Why does the ER doc do a cat scan of a trauma patients head as even if it shows a bleed not going to change how he treats?

Why? So you can properly decide your next course of action and where to send the patient.

Wendy miss seeing you here. Thanks for your post.

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So then why do the basics take blood pressure? It will not change how they treat the patient, they can not raise or lower blood pressure.

Why does the ER doc do a cat scan of a trauma patients head as even if it shows a bleed not going to change how he treats?

Why? So you can properly decide your next course of action and where to send the patient.

Spenac, time for you to go back to the basics...

It'd be a good idea for basics to sit a patient up that has a high blood pressure, and lay a patient down for low blood pressure. There, that was simple. -5 for a stupid question.

If you don't know how a cat scan can change the treatment, then go get a book. -1, for simple ignorance.

Spenac, this could be such a great topic, but, being such a poser, you sure can run it into the ground. The sad thing is, I agree with a lot of what you say, but you're merely an echo, IMO.

You have also echoed yourself, multiple times.

Please, let me reference everyone to these posts, by none other than Spenac. This fetish of your's about exposing patients is really starting to be an old tune...

You first posted about this subject on 06 May 2007

Here is a link.

On 21 Jan 2008, you brought up the subject again. Reading through, its not a bad thread at all. Its title is "Did You Look And Feel? Hands and eyes on?". But, after your last post on 7 April 2008, why, I guess you just love talking about exposure so much, you bumped it on 22 Oct 2008.

If you would like the link, Click Here.

Oh, I almost forgot ! -5 for not using the search feature and duplicating a topic.

But that just was not enough. On 17 March 2009, you just had to revisit the topic. And by the way, I just loooove the name of this thread "Proper Exam Technique - Expose or Fail". So, you apologized earlier for what seems to others to be an attacking delivery message. With a topic title like Expose or Fail, what makes you think we'd take it as attacking...

Anyways, I'm sure everyone would like to see a link. Click Here

-10 for not using the search feature and duplicating a topic, twice now. Also, another -5 for being hypocritical towards others about using the search function.

Then there is the current thread. Here. The 4th time now that you have discussed it. Except now, as I have observed over the years, you have become much more pompous about your position.

So, I guess -20 for a triplicate post and not using the search function, another -10 for being a hypocrite again, and another -5 for not using spell check, and other -5 for just being egotistical about this topic.

Folks, honestly, this is a good topic to discuss, if you read some of the older topics, you'll see some posters from back in the day with some good things to say. Again, all Spenac is doing is echoing others, and then himself. I just hope people can see it for what it is.

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Yikes. I posted at the same time as Matty....There was no collusion there.

It was my desire to give you a frank and honest opinion, to to support a mugging here spenac. But perhaps is you decide to continue the conversation there is useful information in these posts.

Dwayne

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Of course it was me that gave you the negative. Normally you're whining and whatever nonsense you spout in the chat room keeps others feeling sorry for you and prevents them from doing so. But why do you assume that I'm a jerk for giving you a negative? Why can't you, like an adult, assume that I thought that your arguments were shallow, one dimensional, self serving, cookbook Basic level medicine and simply not good educational material on the board? Isn't that what the votes are for? To show others my opinion of your thoughts, either exceptionally good, or exceptionally bad?

Step back from the self pity man. Stop making an argument simply because you believe you will look ignorant if you reverse your position once chosen. There is not a single person here that I respect that doesn't say, on a regular basis, "I don't know" or "ooops, I see your point."

It won't kill you...trust me.

Dwayne

Don't know where that chat non sense came from. I have spent less time in chat than the majority of the old timers here and even many of those newer than me. I just gave you a negative for this post as it is completely nonfactual. Just because you disagree with an opinion does not mean it deserves a negative but I just did the same to you as a return the favor. I am not looking for pity, never have. Again not sure where you got that crap. You really have confused me with someone else. I have done something you have failed to do ever on here. I have brought original thoughts not just thoughts you have taken from others on the site and now you preach like they are gospel.

As to admitting I was wrong or seeing someone else's point I have stated that multiple times on this site.

As to this topic I have taken the devils advocate and preached the extremes with it in many forms as Wendy points out. Why it actually has gotten more EMS discussion going here than we have had in a year. This site is dieing quickly it seems. The only discussions that get much response are political not EMS and those are the same people spouting the same thing over and over again, as many pages as they go sadly there are actually very few posters. But I guess I am not allowed to do the same in your opinion.

Do I actually think we will expose every patient? NO!! Do I think we need to look at improving our thought process as to when to do a more focused exam? Yes!!!!!! So by getting a discussion such as this it gets people thinking. One of the big false thinking is that they should not look unless blood is pouring out the regular clothes or a babies head is popping out. There is a balance based on assessment as Herbie mentioned.

So Dwayne for whatever harm you perceive I have caused you in the past I apologize. Have a great day.

edit for spelling

Edited by spenac
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Wow there it is again not much we can do for it. Or as others state it won't change treatment plan.

So then why do the basics take blood pressure? It will not change how they treat the patient, they can not raise or lower blood pressure.

Why does the ER doc do a cat scan of a trauma patients head as even if it shows a bleed not going to change how he treats?

Why? So you can properly decide your next course of action and where to send the patient.

Wendy miss seeing you here. Thanks for your post.

The difference here is that a pelvic exam, without enough history to warrant us doing it, seriously compromises the dignity and comfort of our patients. I know I'm going to defer a back-of-the-rig pelvic/groin exam (that's me personally, as a human being) unless I'm pretty sure I'm going to die before they get me to the hospital where a gyno can look at me. There's windows on that damn thing- I don't want the neighbors to get a look see as well... and no matter how you try to provide for patient privacy in the back of an ambulance, it's not as private as an exam room.

Blood pressure is part of your global exam and indicates the general well-being of the patient. You are far more likely to have to change your destination or chivvy the ER into moving faster based on any given patient's blood pressure than you are to have to change destination based on a pelvic/abdo complaint. And it doesn't compromise the patient's dignity or open you up to lawsuits. If you've got someone with severe pelvic pain/bleeding/testicular woes, you can bet the doctor will be examining it in short order. Since you couldn't provide the doctor with more info than he will already be gaining, as trending will offer minimal information from a pelvic exam (whereas it offers a lot more info with regard to vital signs), then to my mind there is little indication to do it. Of course, this differs on a case by case basis.

No, I do not always expose. Yes, I am willing to expose if the particular patient's condition and history seem to warrant it.

Wendy

CO EMT-B

Edited by Eydawn
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I've gone to the friggin' mat with Dust, ak, an many others here much smarter than myself and at times left feeling pretty good, at other times bloody and beaten, but still I count each here that has intellectually bashed my head in amongst some of my closest friends. When Wendy used to correct my grammar and spelling I wanted to choke the shit out of her! But I know present myself, though not as well as I'd like, much, much better than I did before she took me to task. (Watch, now she's going to shred this post...and I'll say thank you, though perhaps it will be hard to understand through my gritted teeth.)

See, I told you it would be good for you... :wave:

What is a proper exam? Initial impression, good sets of serial vitals, an in depth current/past history to include current medications whether compliant or not, an attempt to get a decent feel for my pts frame of mind, and depending on their chief complaint exposure up to the point that I believe it is necessary to support or retard my working diagnosis. SPO2, monitor, etc? Sure, if indicated, but they are mostly toys and I can't really think of a time that I couldn't guess what they were going to say before I read their fancy little screens.

This is the crux of it here. Nailed it on the head, Dwayne. Except I think the monitor is more than a shiny toy, as I certainly can't distinguish between different kinds of cardiac without seeing a rhythm... (I over-generalize, but you get what I'm saying...)

A vagina is an amazing and wondrous thing, but I promise you this. No matter how macho you think you are, how many "babes you've bagged", nor how many books you've read or videos you've watched, you will never know more about the inner workings of that freaky little machine than it's owner. Peds and trauma excluded of course. Is it leaking icky stuff? Sure, and it smells nasty! I can't justify being down there under the guise of alerting the ER to this fact. Is it swollen? Yeppers! How come? Beats me, and I can't justify collecting that information under the guise of alerting the ER. Is she tachy, diaphoretic, appearing to be trying to smuggle a giant watermelon under her shirt while she screams "I think it's coming!!!" Ah, see, this might dictate not only a peek, but a good hard look. But my physical exam already told me what to expect before I dropped her drawers, right? I once exposed a rape victim and examined her genitals because she claimed that her attackers had stabbed her multiple times in the rectum and vagina with an ice pick. And the area was a mess. It was ugly, disturbing, but it turned out that she had inflicted the wounds herself. Did I need to expose her? I believe that I did, as I could see blood through her clothing at the vagina and rectum and believed that bleeding control might be necessary. Would I have exposed her if I hadn't seen blood? Absolutely, as she told me that she had been stabbed in that manner and I'd want to look for signs that she had compartmentalized bleeding or that it had perhaps been tamponaded (? Not sure that that is a proper word) in some way. I also checked femoral/pedal pulses, checked cap refill, and did a lower extremity neuro exam on the way to the ER (as well as prudent, associated interventions) in case there was hidden vascular/nerve damage. Those are things that I believe the ER might benefit from knowing at, or prior to my arrival.

Ding ding ding! We have another winner here... this is an example of good in-depth thinking with regard to expose/not expose. And yikes on that psych call... any chick that can stab herself in the vajayjay and anus with an ice pick needs some serious help...

A lot of people here have tried to express their views of your opinions and you've narrowed it down to "everyone thinks I'm right except those that don't like me" again. You need to let that go brother. Many here, such as Wendy, Matty, Dust, akflightmedic, Kaisu, etc, etc, have told me that at times I'm an arrogant, ignorant asshole. And you know what? In each case I went back, reread the posts that caused them to draw those conclusions, and I can't think of a time that they were wrong. Despite my best efforts, sometimes I simply go off into the ditch. And I thank the powers that be that there are people here willing to say, "I know you think that you're right here, but you need to trust me when I tell you that you are thinking and behaving in a way that you wouldn't like if you could see it from the outside looking in."

Sometimes we all need a good smack. It's just the way it is. Myself included. Spenac, take heed here. You get so wrapped up in your own posts sometimes that you become *impossible* to actually debate with. Playing devil's advocate is all well and good until you get too lost in it and lose the actual purpose of your debate. And I prefer individuals playing devil's ad to clearly state so within a few posts. Spenac, I don't think you are playing devil's advocate here, I think you're consistently taking an over-exaggerated stance towards the exposure issue, and you always have. Hot damn, Matty, I didn't realize there had been 4 go-rounds with this... and that to me says it all.

Want to inject some life into the forums? Don't troll. Part of why I've been absent from the City so long is because I've had better things to do. Seriously- I love the forums, I've learned INCREDIBLE amounts here, but I got sick of the bullshit. That last little bit with Ventmedic coming back as a sock puppet really disgusted me, as I used to respect her and look forward to reading what she had to say.

When you're starting nursing school in January, working full-time, taking 14 credits, husband back at school full-time and trying to have a life in between SAR commitments and everything else mentioned above, playing with trolls drops pretty low on the list. I now read a lot of food and healthy living blogs- because there are excellent authors there with very little "ME ME ME!" ego going on. I can read a good, insightful blog about body image issues and nutritional status without getting pissed off and distracted from the million other things I *have* to be attending to, and it provides me with relaxation instead of irritation.

Wendy

CO EMT-B

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