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Assessing an emergency situation that requires first aid can be stressful and difficult, especially when you're looking for or trying to assess injuries underneath the skin. Most emergency situations you're likely to encounter involve some sort of trauma, such as a fall, car accident or physical altercation. As such, checking for signs of a broken bone while administering basic first aid is important because it can help you stabilize the area and prepare the person for trained medical attention.
While some serious fractures poke through the skin (called an open fracture), most remain hidden underneath the skin (called closed fractures). Take a look at the injured person's limbs and neck and check for unnatural angles or positions that likely indicate a fracture or dislocation. Look for a limb that looks shorter, twisted or bent in an unnatural looking way.
A fractured bone is a major injury that requires lots of force, so expect to see swelling, redness and/or bruising. The inflammation and color changes develop quickly near the fracture site, so you shouldn’t have to wait very long to see them. Again, some clothing removal is likely necessary to see swelling.
Although broken bones tend to be very painful (even small hairline / stress fractures), using pain to gauge an injury in an emergency situation can be tricky. First of all, the person may feel varying degrees of pain all over her body, depending on what happened to her. Secondly, the person may be unconscious or in shock and be unable to answer your questions or pinpoint any pain. So, certainly ask the injured person about her pain, but don't rely on it to check for a fracture.
If the injured person is conscious and alert, ask him to carefully and slowly move arms, hands, feet and legs. If he has lots of difficulty and pain with movement, then a fracture or dislocation is possible. You may also hear a grating or cracking noise, which indicates the broken pieces of the bone are rubbing together.
Typically when a bone is broken, especially the larger upper bones of the arms and legs, nerves are also injured or at least stretched and irritated. This produces electric-like pain, but also numbness or "pins and needles" below the site of the injury. Ask the injured person about the sensations in her hands and feet.
If you think an injured person has a bone fracture (or dislocated joint), you should not move it in order to assess or treat it. Instead, you should continue with your basic first-aid treatment while the broken bone is in the position you found it or a more comfortable position chosen by the injured person. Without emergency medical training, moving a broken bone is just too risky.
There's not much you can do to stop the internal bleeding that invariably occurs with a closed fracture, but stopping or slowing down the bleeding from an open fracture is necessary and can be life saving. Apply pressure to the open wound with a sterile bandage, clean cloth or a clean piece of clothing until it stops bleeding and starts to clot — it can take up to five minutes or more, depending on the wound and which blood vessels are damaged.
Never try to realign a broken bone or push it back into the body if it's sticking out. Instead, immobilize (secure) the broken bone with a splintor or sling, particularly if you've had any sort of emergency medical training. Potential material you can use for splints include rolled up newspapers or strips of wood. Remember to immobilize the area both above and below the fracture.
If you decide to support a broken leg or arm with a splint and secure it with an Ace bandage or belt, you need to check for circulation every few minutes until help arrives. Tying the splint on too tight cuts off blood supply to the tissues downstream from the injury and can lead to tissue death from lack of oxygen and nutrients.
If you have any ice, frozen gel packs or bags of frozen veggies near by, apply them over the covered wound to help reduce (or limit) inflammation and numb the pain. Ice causes the small blood vessels to shrink a little so swelling is reduced. Ice will also help stop the bleeding of an open wound.
If you come across an emergency medical situation where people are injured, immediately call 10177 for an ambulance if nobody else has. Time is of the essence, so get help on the way first, then assess the injuries and deliver basic first aid while you're waiting for help to arrive. Precious lost minutes can make the difference between life and death, regardless of your level of first aid training.
Before you approach the injured person to administer first aid, you need to take a moment to look around and make sure there is no immediate danger. If you rush into a scene without checking for threats to your safety — like a downed electrical wire, falling debris, or a dangerous person — you may become injured yourself. Then all you have accomplished is giving emergency personnel two people to rescue instead of one.
Once trained emergency medical help is called and on the way, assess whether an injured person is unconscious and/or not breathing. If the person is not breathing, giving her CPR is your top priority. Check the person's airway to see if it's blocked before giving CPR. Don't check for broken bones until the person is revived and breathing.
Once help is on the way, the person is breathing, bleeding is under control and you've stabilized any broken bones, you need to remain vigilant for shock. Shock is a physiological response to loss of blood, injury and pain, which can quickly become fatal if not properly addressed. Signs to look out for include: feeling faint, rapid shallow breathing, low blood pressure, confusion, strange / inappropriate behavior, loss of consciousness.
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