Patient Assessment

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Emergency Care and Transportation of the Sick and Injured, Twelfth Edition

Patient Assessment

Summary
After students complete this chapter presentation and the related course work, they will
understand the scope and sequence of patient assessment for medical and trauma patients
and all the phases and components of patient assessment. Please note that this chapter is
divided into five sections: scene size-up, primary assessment, history taking, secondary
assessment, and reassessment.

I. Introduction
A. The importance of patient assessment cannot be overemphasized.
B. The assessment process is divided into five main parts:
1. Scene size-up
2. Primary assessment
3. History taking
4. Secondary assessment
5. Reassessment
a. The order in which the steps are performed depends on the patient’s condition
and the environment in which the patient is found.
b. It be may necessary to change the order of some of the steps after scene size-
up based on your findings and the need to prioritize the care of certain
conditions.
C. Rarely does one sign or symptom show you the patient’s status or underlying
problem.
1. A symptom is a subjective condition the patient feels and tells you about.
2. A sign is an objective condition you can observe or measure about the patient.

II. Scene Size-up


A. Refers to your evaluation of the conditions in which you will be operating
1. Situational awareness is necessary throughout the entire call to ensure safety.
2. Dispatch provides basic information about the request for assistance.
a. Scene size-up combines information and observations to help ensure safe and
effective operations.
i. An understanding of the situation and conditions prior to responding
ii. The dispatcher’s information

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Emergency Care and Transportation of the Sick and Injured, Twelfth Edition

iii. An observation of the scene


B. Ensure scene safety.
1. Issues that you may encounter in the prehospital setting can range from minor
difficulties to major dangers.
2. If a scene is not safe for you and your team to enter the scene and approach and
manage the patient, do what you can to make it safe or call for additional
resources.
3. Consider traffic safety issues and issues related to scene safety if you must
approach a patient on a working roadway.
4. Consider environmental conditions at the scene.
5. If appropriate, help protect bystanders from becoming patients as well.
6. Some forms of hazards:
a. Environmental
b. Physical (sharp metal, broken glass, slip-and-fall hazards)
c. Chemical (hazardous materials)
d. Electrical
e. Water
f. Fire
g. Explosions
h. Physical violence
7. Be aware of scenes that have the potential for violence.
a. Violent patients
b. Distraught family members
c. Angry bystanders
d. Gangs
e. Unruly crowds
8. An emergency scene is a dynamically changing environment.
C. Determine mechanism of injury (MOI)/nature of illness (NOI).
1. Calls for assistance to which you may respond can be categorized as medical
conditions, traumatic injuries, or both.
2. Traumatic injuries are the result of physical forces applied to the outside of the
body, usually from an object striking the body or the body striking an object.
3. For patients who have experienced traumatic injuries, determine the mechanism
of injury (MOI).
a. Terms commonly associated with MOI include blunt trauma and penetrating
trauma.
4. For medical patients, determine the nature of illness or NOI.

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Emergency Care and Transportation of the Sick and Injured, Twelfth Edition

5. Be aware of scenes with multiple patients who are exhibiting similar signs or
symptoms as it could indicate an unsafe scene.
D. The importance of the MOI and NOI
1. Considering the MOI or NOI early can be of value in preparing to care for your
patient.
E. Take standard precautions.
1. Standard precautions and personal protective equipment (PPE) need to be
considered and adapted to the prehospital task at hand.
2. Standard precautions are protective measures that have traditionally been
recommended by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for use in
dealing with:
a. Objects
b. Blood
c. Body fluids
d. Other potential exposure risks of communicable disease
3. The concept of standard precautions assumes that all blood, body fluids (except
sweat), nonintact skin, and mucous membranes may pose a substantial risk of
infection.
4. When you step out of the EMS vehicle and before actual patient contact, standard
precautions must have been taken or initiated.
a. At a minimum, gloves must be in place before any patient contact.
b. Also consider glasses and a mask.
F. Determine number of patients.
1. During scene size-up, accurately identifying the total number of patients will help
you determine the need for additional resources.
2. When there are multiple patients, you should use the incident command system,
identify the number of patients, and then begin triage.
a. Triage is the process of sorting patients based on the severity of each patient’s
condition.
G. Consider additional/specialized resources.
1. Specialized resources include:
a. Advanced life support (ALS)
b. Air medical support
c. Fire departments may handle hazardous materials management and technical
rescue services, including complex extrication from motor vehicle crashes,
wilderness search and rescue, high-angle rope rescue, or water rescue.
d. Law enforcement personnel
2. Questions to ask when determining the need for additional resources:

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Emergency Care and Transportation of the Sick and Injured, Twelfth Edition

a. Does the scene pose a threat to you, your patient, or others?


b. How many patients are there?
c. Do we have the resources to respond to their conditions?

III. Primary Assessment


A. Patient assessment begins when you greet your patient.
1. The single, all-important goal of the primary assessment is to identify and begin
treatment of immediate or imminent life threats.
2. Physically examine the patient and assess level of consciousness (LOC) and
airway, breathing, and circulation (ABCs).
B. Form a general impression.
1. Formed to determine the priority of care, it is the first part of your primary
assessment.
2. Includes making a note of the person’s:
a. Age
b. Sex
c. Race
d. Level of distress
e. Overall appearance
3. As you approach, make sure the patient sees you coming.
a. Note the patient’s position and whether the patient is moving or still.
b. Avoid standing over the patient, if possible.
c. Address the patient by name.
d. Introduce yourself to the patient.
e. Ask about the chief complaint.
f. The patient’s response can give insight into the LOC, air patency, respiratory
status, and overall circulatory status.
g. Life-threatening problems should be treated immediately.
4. Define whether your patient’s condition is stable, stable but potentially unstable,
or unstable to direct further assessment and treatment.
C. Scan for signs of uncontrolled external bleeding.
1. Uncontrolled external bleeding takes priority over other assessments.
D. Assess level of consciousness (LOC).
1. The LOC can tell you a great deal about the patient’s neurologic and physiologic
status.

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Emergency Care and Transportation of the Sick and Injured, Twelfth Edition

2. Assessment of an unconscious patient focuses first on airway, breathing, and


circulation (ABCs).
a. Sustained unconsciousness should warn you that a critical respiratory,
circulatory, or central nervous system problem or deficit might exist.
3. Conscious with an altered LOC may be due to inadequate perfusion, medications,
drugs alcohol, or poisoning.
4. The AVPU scale tests a patient’s responsiveness.
5. Stimulus tests determine whether a patient who does not respond to verbal stimuli
will respond to a painful stimulus. These tests include:
a. Pinching the patient’s skin
i. Back of the upper arm
ii. Trapezius area
b. Applying upward pressure along the ridge of the orbital rim along the
underside of the eyebrow
c. A patient who moans or withdraws is responding to the stimulus.
6. Orientation tests mental status by checking a patient’s memory and thinking
ability.
a. Evaluates a patient’s ability to remember:
i. Person—remembers his or her name
ii. Place—identifies the current location
iii. Time—the current year, month, and approximate date
iv. Event—describes what happened
b. Any deviation from alert and oriented to person, place, time, and event, or
from a patient’s normal baseline is considered an altered mental status.
D. Identify and treat life threats
1. A life-threatening condition can quickly lead to death.
a. Conditions that cause sudden death: airway obstruction, respiratory failure,
respiratory arrest, shock, severe bleeding, and cardiac arrest.
2. In most cases, identifying and correcting life-threatening issues begins with the
airway, followed by breathing and circulation (ABC).
a. In some cases, it is more appropriate to address life threats to circulation first,
following a sequence of circulation, airway, and breathing (CAB).
E. Assess the airway.
1. As you move through the primary assessment, stay alert for signs of airway
obstruction.
2. Ensure that the airway remains open (patent) and adequate.
3. Responsive patients
a. Patients of any age who are talking or crying have an open airway

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Emergency Care and Transportation of the Sick and Injured, Twelfth Edition

b. A conscious patient who cannot speak or cry most likely has a severe airway
obstruction.
c. If you identify an airway problem, stop the assessment process and work to
clear the patient’s airway.
d. If your patient has signs of difficulty breathing or is not breathing,
immediately take corrective actions.
4. Unresponsive patients
a. Immediately assess the patency of the airway.
b. If there is a potential for trauma, use the jaw-thrust maneuver to open the
airway.
c. If the airway cannot be open using the jaw-thrust maneuver or if it can be
confirmed that the patient did not experience a traumatic event, use the head
tilt–chin lift maneuver.
5. Signs of obstruction in an unconscious patient:
a. Obvious trauma, blood, or other obstruction
b. Noisy breathing, such as snoring, bubbling, gurgling, crowing, stridor, or
other abnormal sounds
c. Extremely shallow or absent breathing
E. Assess breathing.
1. Once you have made sure the patient’s airway is open, make sure the patient’s
breathing is present and adequate.
2. Ask yourself the following questions:
a. Is the patient breathing?
b. Is the patient breathing adequately?
c. Is the patient hypoxic?
1. Positive pressure ventilations should be performed for patients who are not
breathing or whose breathing is too slow or too shallow.
2. If the patient is breathing adequately but remains hypoxic, administer oxygen.
a. The goal for oxygenation for most patients is an oxygen saturation of
approximately 94% to 99%.
3. If a patient seems to develop difficulty breathing after your primary assessment,
you should immediately reevaluate the airway.
a. Consider providing positive pressure ventilations with an airway adjunct
when:
i. Respirations exceed 28 breaths/min.
ii. Respirations are fewer than 8 breaths/min.
iii. Respirations are too shallow to provide adequate air exchange.

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Emergency Care and Transportation of the Sick and Injured, Twelfth Edition

6. Shallow respirations can be identified by little movement of the chest wall


(reduced tidal volume) or poor chest excursion.
7. Observe how much effort is required for the patient to breathe.
a. Presence of retractions
b. Use of accessory muscles
c. Nasal flaring
d. Two- to three-word dyspnea
e. Tripod position
f. Sniffing position
g. Labored breathing
8. Respiratory distress
a. Increased effort and rate
9. Respiratory failure
a. Occurs when the blood is inadequately oxygenated or ventilation is inadequate
to meet the oxygen demands of the body
b. Respiratory arrest is the ultimate result of respiratory failure if it is not
corrected.
F. Assess circulation.
1. Evaluated by assessing the patient’s mental status, pulse, and skin condition
2. Assess pulse.
a. To determine if a pulse is present, you will need to palpate the pulse.
i. In responsive patients who are older than 1 year, you should palpate the radial
pulse at the wrist.
ii. In unresponsive patients older than 1 year, you should palpate the carotid pulse in
the neck.
iii. Palpate the brachial pulse, located at the medial area (inside) of the upper arm, in
children younger than 1 year.
b. If you cannot palpate a pulse in an unresponsive patient, begin CPR.
3. Skin condition
a. Perfusion is assessed by evaluating a patient’s skin color, temperature,
moisture, and capillary refill.
b. Skin color
i. Poor peripheral circulation will cause the skin to appear pale, white, ashen, or
gray.
ii. High blood pressure may cause the skin to be abnormally flushed and red.
iii. When the blood is not properly saturated with oxygen, it appears blue.
c. Skin temperature
i. Normal skin temperature will be warm to the touch.

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Emergency Care and Transportation of the Sick and Injured, Twelfth Edition

ii. Abnormal skin temperatures are hot, cool, cold, and clammy.
d. Skin moisture
i. Dry skin is normal.
ii. Skin that is wet, moist, or excessively dry and hot suggests a problem.
e. Capillary refill
i. Capillary refill is often evaluated in pediatric patients to assess the ability of the
circulatory system to perfuse the capillary system in the fingers and toes.
4. Assess and control external bleeding.
a. Should occur before addressing airway or breathing concerns.
b. Bleeding from a large vein is characterized by a steady flow of blood.
c. Bleeding from an artery is characterized by a spurting flow of blood.
d. Controlling external bleeding is often very simple.
i. Apply direct pressure.
ii. If direct pressure is not quickly successful or if there is an obvious arterial
hemorrhage of an extremity, apply a tourniquet.
G. Perform a rapid exam to identify life threats.
1. Identify injuries that must be managed or protected before the patient is
transported.
a. Take 60 to 90 seconds to perform the rapid scan.
b. This is not a systematic or focused physical examination.
2. See Skill Drill 10-1.
H. Determine priority of patient care and transport.
1. High-priority patients include those with any of the following conditions:
a. Unresponsive
b. Difficulty breathing
c. Uncontrolled bleeding
d. Altered level of consciousness
e. Severe chest pain
f. Pale skin or other signs of poor perfusion
g. Complicated childbirth
h. Severe pain in any area of the body
2. The Golden Hour (Golden Period) is the time from injury to definitive care,
during which treatment of shock and traumatic injuries must occur in order to
maximize the patient’s chance of survival.
a. Immediate transport is one of the keys to survival of patients who need
immediate care that the EMT cannot provide.
3. Transport decisions should be made at this point.
a. Transport decisions are based on:

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Emergency Care and Transportation of the Sick and Injured, Twelfth Edition

i. Patient’s condition
ii. Availability of advanced care
iii. Distance of transport
iv. Local protocols

IV. History Taking


A. Provides detail about the patient’s chief complaint and an account of the
patient’s signs and symptoms
B. Be sure to document the following information:
1. Date of the incident
2. Patient’s age
3. Patient’s gender
4. Patient’s race
5. Past medical history
6. Patient’s current health status
C. Investigate the chief complaint (history of present illness).
1. Begin by making introductions, make the patient feel comfortable, and obtain
permission to treat.
a. Ask a few simple and direct questions.
b. Refer to the patient as Mr., Ms., or Mrs., using the patient’s last name.
c. Open-ended questions will help determine the chief complaint.
d. Use eye contact to encourage the patient to continue speaking and repeat
statements back to show understanding.
2. If the patient is unresponsive, gather information from people present on-scene or
clues from the patient’s surroundings.
3. Use the OPQRST mnemonic for gathering additional information about the
patient’s present illness and current symptoms.
4. Identify pertinent negatives.
a. Pertinent negatives are negative findings that warrant no care or intervention.
D. Obtain SAMPLE history.
E. Critical thinking in assessment
1. Critical thinking is an essential component in assessing a patient and involves:
a. Gathering: seeking facts to help your clinical decision making and scene
management
b. Evaluating: considering what the information gathered means

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Emergency Care and Transportation of the Sick and Injured, Twelfth Edition

c. Synthesizing: putting together the information that you have gathered and
validated and synthesizing it into a plan to manage the scene and/or care for
the patient.
F. Taking history on sensitive topics
1. Alcohol and drugs
a. Signs may be confusing, hidden, or disguised
b. Many patients may deny having any problems.
c. The history gathered from a chemically dependent patient may be unreliable.
d. Do not judge the patient, and be professional in your approach.
2. Physical abuse or violence
a. Report all physical abuse or domestic violence to the appropriate authorities.
b. Follow state laws and local protocols.
c. Do not accuse; instead, immediately involve law enforcement.
3. Sexual history
a. Consider all female patients of childbearing age who report lower abdominal
pain to be pregnant unless ruled out by history or other information.
b. Ask about the patient’s last menstrual period.
c. Inquire about urinary symptoms with male patients.
d. When appropriate, ask about the potential for sexually transmitted diseases in
all patients
G. Special challenges in obtaining patient history include:
1. Silence
a. Patience is extremely important when dealing with patients and their
emergency crises.
b. Using a closed-ended question that requires a simple yes or no answer may
work best.
c. Consider whether the silence is a clue to the patient’s chief complaint.
2. Overly talkative
a. Reasons why a patient may be overly talkative:
i. Excessive caffeine consumption
ii. Nervousness
iii. Ingestion of cocaine, crack, or methamphetamines
iv. Underlying psychological issue
3. Multiple symptoms
a. Prioritize the patient’s complaints as you would in triage; start with the most
serious and end with the least serious.
4. Anxiety

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Emergency Care and Transportation of the Sick and Injured, Twelfth Edition

a. Consider the context of the situation and recognize that the observed anxiety
may be a sign of a serious underlying medical condition.
b. Frequently, anxious patients can be observed in emergency scenes that
involve a large number of patients, such as during a disaster.
c. Some anxious patients show signs of psychological shock, such as:
i. Pallor
ii. Diaphoresis
iii. Shortness of breath
iv. Numbness in the hands and feet
v. Dizziness or light-headedness
vi. Loss of consciousness
d. Anxiety can be an early indicator of:
i. Low blood glucose level
ii. Shock
iii. Hypoxia
5. Anger and hostility
a. Friends, family, or bystanders may direct their anger and rage toward you.
b. Remain calm, reassuring, and gentle.
c. If the scene is not safe or secured, retreat until it is secured.
6. Intoxication
a. Do not put an intoxicated patient in a position where he or she feels threatened
and has no way out.
i. The potential for violence and a physical confrontation is high when a patient is
intoxicated.
b. Alcohol dulls a patient’s senses.
7. Crying
a. A patient who cries may be sad, in pain, or emotionally overwhelmed.
b. Remain calm and be patient, reassuring, and confident, and maintain a soft
voice.
8. Depression
a. Depression is among the leading causes of disability worldwide.
b. Symptoms include:
i. Sadness
ii. A feeling of hopelessness
iii. Restlessness
iv. Irritability
v. Sleeping and eating disorders
vi. A decreased energy level

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Emergency Care and Transportation of the Sick and Injured, Twelfth Edition

c. The most effective treatment in handling a patient’s depression is being a


good listener.
9. Confusing behavior or history
a. Conditions such as hypoxia, stroke, diabetes, trauma, medication use, and
other drug use could alter a patient’s explanation of events.
i. Hypoxia is the most common cause of confusion.
b. In older patients, it is not uncommon to encounter a patient who has dementia,
delirium, or Alzheimer disease.
10. Limited cognitive abilities
a. Keep your questions simple, and limit the use of medical terms.
b. Be alert for partial answers, and keep asking questions.
c. In cases of patients with severely limited cognitive function, rely on the
presence of family, caregivers, and friends to supply answers to your
questions.
11. Cultural challenges
a. Do not use medical language.
b. Patients from some cultures may prefer to speak only with health care
providers of the same gender.
c. Gain the assistance of the patient’s friends or family members and enlist the
help of health care providers of the same culture or background, if possible.
12. Language barriers
a. Find an interpreter, if possible.
b. If not, determine whether the patient understands who you are.
c. Keep questions straightforward and brief, and use hand gestures.
d. Be aware of the language diversity in your community.
13. Hearing problems
a. Ask questions slowly and clearly.
b. Use a stethoscope to function as a hearing aid for the patient.
c. Learning simple sign language during your career will help in the
communication process.
d. Use a pencil and paper.
14. Visual impairments
a. Identify yourself verbally when entering the scene.
b. It is important that you put any items that have been moved back into their
previous position.
c. During the assessment and history-taking process, explain each step in the
vital signs assessment.

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Emergency Care and Transportation of the Sick and Injured, Twelfth Edition

d. Notify the patient before preparing to lift the patient and move him or her on
the stretcher.

V. Secondary Assessment
A. If the patient is in stable condition and has an isolated complaint, you may
choose to perform the secondary assessment at the scene.
B. If the secondary assessment is not performed at the scene, it is performed in the
back of the ambulance en route to the hospital.
C. However, there will be situations where you may not have time to perform the
secondary assessment.
1. You may have to continue to manage life threats identified during the primary
assessment en route to the hospital.
D. The purpose is to perform a systematic physical examination of the patient.
1. An assessment that focuses on a certain area or system of the body, often
determined through the chief complaint (a focused assessment)
2. How and what to assess during a physical examination:
a. Inspection—Look at the patient for abnormalities.
b. Palpation—Touch or feel the patient for abnormalities.
c. Auscultation—Listen to the sounds a body makes by using a stethoscope.
3. The mnemonic DCAP-BTLS reminds you what to look for when inspecting and
palpating various body regions.
4. Compare findings on one side of the body with the other side when possible.
D. Systematically assess the patient—secondary assessment.
1. The goal is to identify hidden injuries or identify causes that may not have been
identified during the 60- to 90-second exam during the primary assessment.
2. See Skill Drill 10-2.
E. Systematically assess the patient—focused assessment.
1. Performed on patients who have sustained nonsignificant MOIs or on responsive
medical patients
2. Typically based on the chief complaint
3. The goal is to focus your attention on the body part or systems affected by the
priority problems.
4. Respiratory system
a. Expose the patient’s chest.
b. Look again for signs of airway obstruction, as well as trauma to the neck
and/or chest.

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Emergency Care and Transportation of the Sick and Injured, Twelfth Edition

c. Inspect the chest for overall symmetry.


d. Listen carefully to breath sounds, noting abnormalities.
e. Measure the respiratory rate, chest rise and fall (for tidal volume), and effort.
f. Look for retractions.
g. Look for increased work of breathing.
h. When assessing breathing, obtain the following information:
i. Respiratory rate
ii. Rhythm
iii. Quality of breathing
iv. Depth of breathing
i. Auscultating breath sounds
5. Cardiovascular system
a. Look for trauma to the chest and listen for breath sounds.
b. Consider the pulse and respiratory rate and the blood pressure.
c. Pay particular attention to rate, quality, and rhythm.
d. Consider your findings when assessing the skin.
e. Check and compare distal pulses to determine any right and left side
differences.
f. Consider auscultation for abnormal heart sounds.
g. Pulse rate
h. Pulse quality
i. Pulse rhythm
j. Blood pressure
k. A blood pressure cuff with gauge (sphygmomanometer) contains the
following components:
i. A wide outer cuff
ii. An inflatable wide bladder sewn into a portion of the cuff
iii. A ball-pump with a one-way valve
iv. A pressure gauge calibrated in millimeters of mercury
l. Auscultation is the most common means of measuring a patient’s blood
pressure.
i. See Skill Drill 10-3.
m. The palpation (feeling) method does not depend on your ability to hear sounds
and should be used in certain cases to obtain a patient’s blood pressure.
i. See Skill Drill 10-4.
n. Normal blood pressure
6. Neurologic system
a. A neurologic assessment should be performed any time you are confronted
with a patient who has:

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Emergency Care and Transportation of the Sick and Injured, Twelfth Edition

i. Changes in mental status


ii. A possible head injury
iii. Stupor
iv. Dizziness
v. Drowsiness
vi. Syncope
b. Evaluate the LOC and orientation to determine the patient’s ability to think.
i. Use the AVPU scale if appropriate to determine the patient’s mental status.
c. The Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) score can be helpful in providing additional
information on patients with mental status changes.
d. Pupils
i. Normally round and of approximately equal size and adjust their size depending
on the available light.
ii. The diameter and reactivity to light of the patient’s pupils can reflect the status of
the brain’s perfusion, oxygenation, and condition.
iii. In the absence of light, the pupils will become fully relaxed and dilated.
vi. A small number of the population exhibit unequal pupils (anisocoria).
v. Abnormal pupillary response can indicate altered brain function.
vi. The mnemonic PEARRL is a useful assessment guide:
(a) Pupils
(b) Equal
(c) And
(d) Round
(e) Regular in size
(f) React to Light
7. Assessing neurovascular status
a. Perform a hands-on assessment to determine sensory and motor response.
b. Check for bilateral muscle strength and weaknesses.
c. Complete a thorough sensory assessment.
d. Test for pain, sensations, and position, and compare distal and proximal
sensory and motor responses and one side with the other.
e. See Skill Drill 10-5.
8. Anatomic regions
a. Head, neck, and cervical spine
b. Chest
c. Abdomen
d. Pelvis
e. Extremities
f. Posterior body
F. Assess vital signs using the appropriate monitoring device.

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Emergency Care and Transportation of the Sick and Injured, Twelfth Edition

1. These devices should never be used to replace your comprehensive assessment of


your patient.
2. Pulse oximetry
3. Capnography
4. Blood glucometry
a. See Skill Drill 9-6.
5. Noninvasive blood pressure measurement

VI. Reassessment
A. Perform a reassessment at regular intervals during the assessment process.
1. The purpose of reassessment is to identify and treat changes in a patient’s
condition.
B. Repeat the primary assessment.
C. Reassess vital signs.
1. Compare the baseline vitals obtained during the primary assessment with any and
all subsequent vital signs.
2. Look for trends.
D. Reassess the chief complaint.
E. Recheck interventions.
F. Identify and treat changes in the patient’s condition.
G. Reassess patient.
1. A patient in unstable condition should be reassessed approximately every 5
minutes.
2. A patient in stable condition should be reassessed approximately every 15
minutes.

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