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Temple College EMS Professions 1
COMMUNICATIONS
EMERGENCY MEDICAL TECHNICIAN -
BASIC
Temple College EMS Professions 2
PHASES IN EMS
COMMUNICATIONS
• ACCESS/NOTIFICATION
– Communication between party needing help
and dispatcher
– Via public telephone
– Via non-public telephone or radio from fire,
police
Temple College EMS Professions 3
PHASES IN EMS
COMMUNICATIONS
• DISPATCH
– Alert personnel and direct to scene
– Radio paging, telephone, radio voice
communications
Temple College EMS Professions 4
PHASES IN EMS
COMMUNICATIONS
• COMMUNICATIONS BETWEEN
DISPATCH AND EMS UNIT
– En route
– On-scene
– Departure from scene
– Arrival at receiving facility
– In-service
Temple College EMS Professions 5
PHASES IN EMS
COMMUNICATIONS
• COMMUNICATIONS BETWEEN
DISPATCH AND EMS UNIT (Cont.)
– Assistance with mechanical or navigational
problem
– Immediate assistance or information from
police, fire, or highway department
– General coordination of units
Temple College EMS Professions 6
PHASES IN EMS
COMMUNICATIONS
• COMMUNICATIONS BETWEEN EMS
UNIT AND HOSPITAL/PHYSICIAN
– Early alert of hospital to incoming patients
– On-line medical direction
– Diversion to specialized health care facilities
Temple College EMS Professions 7
PHASES IN EMS
COMMUNICATIONS
• COMMUNICATIONS BETWEEN
HOSPITALS
– Direct link for medical resources and patient
transfers
– Back-up communications link
Temple College EMS Professions 8
PHASES IN EMS
COMMUNICATIONS
• COMMUNICATIONS WITH SUPPORT
AGENCIES
– Through dispatch centers
– Directly between field units
Temple College EMS Professions 9
PHASES IN EMS
COMMUNICATIONS
• COORDINATION WITH OTHER
COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
– Amateur radio
– Citizen’s band
– Commercial broadcast
– Business radio
Temple College EMS Professions 10
EMS Communications & the FCC
• Control all radio communications
• Allocate specific radio frequencies for use
by EMS providers
• License base stations and assign call signs
Temple College EMS Professions 11
EMS Communications & the FCC
• Establish licensing standards and operating
specifications
• Establish limits for transmitter power output
• Monitor radio operations
Temple College EMS Professions 12
EMS COMMUNICATIONS
COMPONENTS
• BASE STATION
– Transmitter/Receiver at fixed location
– Used for dispatch, coordination, medical
control
– Geography/Terrain influence installation
– Power output is 42-275 watts
– Multi-channel bases can receive on all channels
simultaneously but can transmit on only one
channel at a time
Temple College EMS Professions 13
EMS COMMUNICATIONS
COMPONENTS
• MOBILE TRANSMITTER/RECEIVERS
– Physically mounted in vehicles
– Power output is 20-50 watts
– Range is 10-12 miles over average terrain
• decreases in mountainous areas, areas with large
buildings
• increases on water or flat terrain
– All mobiles in local system have multiple
channel capacity
Temple College EMS Professions 14
EMS COMMUNICATIONS
COMPONENTS
• PORTABLE
TRANSMITTER/RECEIVERS
– Hand-held - “walkie-talkie”
– Range limited by low output power
– May be single or multi-channel
– May be designed to retransmit through mobile
unit to increase range
– Best signal quality - antenna perpendicular
Temple College EMS Professions 15
EMS COMMUNICATIONS
COMPONENTS
• REPEATERS
– Extend range of mobile and portable units
– Receive signal on one frequency and retransmit
it on second frequency at higher power
– May be fixed or mobile
Temple College EMS Professions 16
EMS COMMUNICATIONS
COMPONENTS
• SATELLITE RECEIVERS
– Additional receivers located about area of
desired radio coverage to insure low power
mobiles and portables are always in range
– Connected to base station or repeater by
telephone lines or microwave relay
Temple College EMS Professions 17
EMS COMMUNICATIONS
COMPONENTS
• REMOTE CONSOLES
– Control console and microphone connected to
base station by telephone lines, microwave,
radio
– Allows remote locations such as hospitals to
use base station
• ENCODERS/DECODERS
Temple College EMS Professions 18
TRANSMITTING
INFORMATION
• Have all information you need to report
available BEFORE you start talking
• Report the status of the ABC’s, the chief
complaint, and the vital signs EARLY
• Do Not Diagnose; Describe the patient’s
problem
Temple College EMS Professions 19
TRANSMITTING
INFORMATION
• Use standard medical terminology
– If you don’t know the word, use plain English
• Repeat all orders
– if you are uncertain about what the physician
said or you think an order is incorrect, ask
him/her to repeat the order
Temple College EMS Professions 20
TRANSMITTING
INFORMATION
• Avoid on-going transmissions
– Stop talking every minute and assure that the
receiving station has copied
• Use a standard format for reporting patient
information report the same way, every time
Temple College EMS Professions 21
TRANSMITTING
INFORMATION
• If a standard format is not used .
– all the essential information is not provided
– time is wasted
– patient care is delayed while the hospital
attempts to get needed information
– frustration will result
Temple College EMS Professions 22
TRANSMITTING
INFORMATION
• The better the picture you can paint for the
receiving personnel, the better prepared
they will be to receive your patient
• REMEMBER: Your job is to communicate,
not to show off!
Temple College EMS Professions 23
PRESENTING INFORMATION
• IDENTIFY YOURSELF
– Identify service, unit number, personnel I.D.
number
• IDENTIFY PATIENT
– Age, sex, and weight (no names)
Temple College EMS Professions 24
PRESENTING INFORMATION
• IDENTIFY SITUATION
– Causes
– Mechanism of Injury
• IDENTIFY CHIEF
COMPLAINT/INJURIES
– An elaboration of the chief complaint
Temple College EMS Professions 25
PRESENTING INFORMATION
• PHYSICAL EXAMINATION
– Pulse
– Respirations
– Blood Pressure
– Pupils
– Skin
– Neurological Condition
– Vascular Signs
– Pertinent findings in order from head to toe
Temple College EMS Professions 26
PRESENTING INFORMATION
• PAST Medical History
– Pertinent medical history
– Allergies
– Medications
• PROTOCOL TREATMENT
– Treatment given prior to transmission
– Confirmation of treatment ordered
Temple College EMS Professions 27
PRESENTING INFORMATION
• CHANGE IN PT. CONDITION
• PHYSICIAN
• DESTINATION
– Signal, code, ETA
Temple College EMS Professions 28
MULTIPLE PATIENTS
• Number each patient
• Present complete information on each
patient before continuing to next
• Present most serious to least serious
Temple College EMS Professions 29
USING A TRANSMITTER/
RECEIVER
• Know what you are going to say before you
start talking. Do not waste air time
• Never transmit without monitoring the
frequency first
• Wait two seconds after keying the
microphone before talking
Temple College EMS Professions 30
USING A TRANSMITTER/
RECEIVER
• Identify yourself on every transmission
• Speak at close range, directly into the
microphone
• Do not yell, use normal conversational tone
and speed
Temple College EMS Professions 31
USING A TRANSMITTER/
RECEIVER
• Articulate clearly
• Use proper English
• Avoid using codes
Temple College EMS Professions 32
USING A TRANSMITTER/
RECEIVER
• Be courteous
• Don’t show emotion; don’t curse or use
obscene language
• Do not vocalize pauses
• Do not unkey your microphone until you
have finished talking
Temple College EMS Professions 33
INTERPERSONAL
COMMUNICATION
• Make and keep eye contact
• Be Confident
– Confidence in yourself will inspire trust from
the Pt.
Temple College EMS Professions 34
INTERPERSONAL
COMMUNICATION
• Be Respectful
– Use proper names unless told otherwise
– Do not speak condescendingly
• “Hon”
• “Darling”
– Be conscious of cultural differences
Temple College EMS Professions 35
INTERPERSONAL
COMMUNICATION
• Be Courteous
– Please
– Thank you
– Yes Ma’am/Sir
– No Ma’am/Sir
• Be Truthful
Temple College EMS Professions 36
INTERPERSONAL
COMMUNICATION
• Use terms that the pt/Family will
understand
• Be careful of what you say about the Pt and
where you say it
• Be aware of your body language
Temple College EMS Professions 37
INTERPERSONAL
COMMUNICATION
• Speak slowly/enunciate
• Allow time for the Pt to answer questions
Temple College EMS Professions 38
SPECIAL PATIENTS
• Non-English speaking
– Use Interpreter
– Do not attempt language if unsure
– Use Flash Cards
Temple College EMS Professions 39
SPECIAL PATIENTS
• Hearing Impaired
– Use Interpreter
– Face Pt. when speaking
• Allows them to see your lips
• Allows them to see your facial expression
Temple College EMS Professions 40
SPECIAL PATIENTS
• Children
– Get on their “level”
– Approach slowly
– Avoid threatening postures
– Explain everything that you do
Temple College EMS Professions 41
SPECIAL PATIENTS
• Children
– Don’t lie
– Respect a child’s modesty
– Use parents to calm child (If parent is calm)
– Let Parent hold child if not contraindicated
– Allow child to keep familiar objects
Temple College EMS Professions 42
SPECIAL PATIENTS
• Elderly
– Use last names of older patients until told
otherwise
– Don’t use slang
– Don’t assume senility/deafness/infirmities
– Be aware of cultural differences
– Don’t rush Pt
– Attend to family

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Communications.ppt

  • 1. Temple College EMS Professions 1 COMMUNICATIONS EMERGENCY MEDICAL TECHNICIAN - BASIC
  • 2. Temple College EMS Professions 2 PHASES IN EMS COMMUNICATIONS • ACCESS/NOTIFICATION – Communication between party needing help and dispatcher – Via public telephone – Via non-public telephone or radio from fire, police
  • 3. Temple College EMS Professions 3 PHASES IN EMS COMMUNICATIONS • DISPATCH – Alert personnel and direct to scene – Radio paging, telephone, radio voice communications
  • 4. Temple College EMS Professions 4 PHASES IN EMS COMMUNICATIONS • COMMUNICATIONS BETWEEN DISPATCH AND EMS UNIT – En route – On-scene – Departure from scene – Arrival at receiving facility – In-service
  • 5. Temple College EMS Professions 5 PHASES IN EMS COMMUNICATIONS • COMMUNICATIONS BETWEEN DISPATCH AND EMS UNIT (Cont.) – Assistance with mechanical or navigational problem – Immediate assistance or information from police, fire, or highway department – General coordination of units
  • 6. Temple College EMS Professions 6 PHASES IN EMS COMMUNICATIONS • COMMUNICATIONS BETWEEN EMS UNIT AND HOSPITAL/PHYSICIAN – Early alert of hospital to incoming patients – On-line medical direction – Diversion to specialized health care facilities
  • 7. Temple College EMS Professions 7 PHASES IN EMS COMMUNICATIONS • COMMUNICATIONS BETWEEN HOSPITALS – Direct link for medical resources and patient transfers – Back-up communications link
  • 8. Temple College EMS Professions 8 PHASES IN EMS COMMUNICATIONS • COMMUNICATIONS WITH SUPPORT AGENCIES – Through dispatch centers – Directly between field units
  • 9. Temple College EMS Professions 9 PHASES IN EMS COMMUNICATIONS • COORDINATION WITH OTHER COMMUNICATION NETWORKS – Amateur radio – Citizen’s band – Commercial broadcast – Business radio
  • 10. Temple College EMS Professions 10 EMS Communications & the FCC • Control all radio communications • Allocate specific radio frequencies for use by EMS providers • License base stations and assign call signs
  • 11. Temple College EMS Professions 11 EMS Communications & the FCC • Establish licensing standards and operating specifications • Establish limits for transmitter power output • Monitor radio operations
  • 12. Temple College EMS Professions 12 EMS COMMUNICATIONS COMPONENTS • BASE STATION – Transmitter/Receiver at fixed location – Used for dispatch, coordination, medical control – Geography/Terrain influence installation – Power output is 42-275 watts – Multi-channel bases can receive on all channels simultaneously but can transmit on only one channel at a time
  • 13. Temple College EMS Professions 13 EMS COMMUNICATIONS COMPONENTS • MOBILE TRANSMITTER/RECEIVERS – Physically mounted in vehicles – Power output is 20-50 watts – Range is 10-12 miles over average terrain • decreases in mountainous areas, areas with large buildings • increases on water or flat terrain – All mobiles in local system have multiple channel capacity
  • 14. Temple College EMS Professions 14 EMS COMMUNICATIONS COMPONENTS • PORTABLE TRANSMITTER/RECEIVERS – Hand-held - “walkie-talkie” – Range limited by low output power – May be single or multi-channel – May be designed to retransmit through mobile unit to increase range – Best signal quality - antenna perpendicular
  • 15. Temple College EMS Professions 15 EMS COMMUNICATIONS COMPONENTS • REPEATERS – Extend range of mobile and portable units – Receive signal on one frequency and retransmit it on second frequency at higher power – May be fixed or mobile
  • 16. Temple College EMS Professions 16 EMS COMMUNICATIONS COMPONENTS • SATELLITE RECEIVERS – Additional receivers located about area of desired radio coverage to insure low power mobiles and portables are always in range – Connected to base station or repeater by telephone lines or microwave relay
  • 17. Temple College EMS Professions 17 EMS COMMUNICATIONS COMPONENTS • REMOTE CONSOLES – Control console and microphone connected to base station by telephone lines, microwave, radio – Allows remote locations such as hospitals to use base station • ENCODERS/DECODERS
  • 18. Temple College EMS Professions 18 TRANSMITTING INFORMATION • Have all information you need to report available BEFORE you start talking • Report the status of the ABC’s, the chief complaint, and the vital signs EARLY • Do Not Diagnose; Describe the patient’s problem
  • 19. Temple College EMS Professions 19 TRANSMITTING INFORMATION • Use standard medical terminology – If you don’t know the word, use plain English • Repeat all orders – if you are uncertain about what the physician said or you think an order is incorrect, ask him/her to repeat the order
  • 20. Temple College EMS Professions 20 TRANSMITTING INFORMATION • Avoid on-going transmissions – Stop talking every minute and assure that the receiving station has copied • Use a standard format for reporting patient information report the same way, every time
  • 21. Temple College EMS Professions 21 TRANSMITTING INFORMATION • If a standard format is not used . – all the essential information is not provided – time is wasted – patient care is delayed while the hospital attempts to get needed information – frustration will result
  • 22. Temple College EMS Professions 22 TRANSMITTING INFORMATION • The better the picture you can paint for the receiving personnel, the better prepared they will be to receive your patient • REMEMBER: Your job is to communicate, not to show off!
  • 23. Temple College EMS Professions 23 PRESENTING INFORMATION • IDENTIFY YOURSELF – Identify service, unit number, personnel I.D. number • IDENTIFY PATIENT – Age, sex, and weight (no names)
  • 24. Temple College EMS Professions 24 PRESENTING INFORMATION • IDENTIFY SITUATION – Causes – Mechanism of Injury • IDENTIFY CHIEF COMPLAINT/INJURIES – An elaboration of the chief complaint
  • 25. Temple College EMS Professions 25 PRESENTING INFORMATION • PHYSICAL EXAMINATION – Pulse – Respirations – Blood Pressure – Pupils – Skin – Neurological Condition – Vascular Signs – Pertinent findings in order from head to toe
  • 26. Temple College EMS Professions 26 PRESENTING INFORMATION • PAST Medical History – Pertinent medical history – Allergies – Medications • PROTOCOL TREATMENT – Treatment given prior to transmission – Confirmation of treatment ordered
  • 27. Temple College EMS Professions 27 PRESENTING INFORMATION • CHANGE IN PT. CONDITION • PHYSICIAN • DESTINATION – Signal, code, ETA
  • 28. Temple College EMS Professions 28 MULTIPLE PATIENTS • Number each patient • Present complete information on each patient before continuing to next • Present most serious to least serious
  • 29. Temple College EMS Professions 29 USING A TRANSMITTER/ RECEIVER • Know what you are going to say before you start talking. Do not waste air time • Never transmit without monitoring the frequency first • Wait two seconds after keying the microphone before talking
  • 30. Temple College EMS Professions 30 USING A TRANSMITTER/ RECEIVER • Identify yourself on every transmission • Speak at close range, directly into the microphone • Do not yell, use normal conversational tone and speed
  • 31. Temple College EMS Professions 31 USING A TRANSMITTER/ RECEIVER • Articulate clearly • Use proper English • Avoid using codes
  • 32. Temple College EMS Professions 32 USING A TRANSMITTER/ RECEIVER • Be courteous • Don’t show emotion; don’t curse or use obscene language • Do not vocalize pauses • Do not unkey your microphone until you have finished talking
  • 33. Temple College EMS Professions 33 INTERPERSONAL COMMUNICATION • Make and keep eye contact • Be Confident – Confidence in yourself will inspire trust from the Pt.
  • 34. Temple College EMS Professions 34 INTERPERSONAL COMMUNICATION • Be Respectful – Use proper names unless told otherwise – Do not speak condescendingly • “Hon” • “Darling” – Be conscious of cultural differences
  • 35. Temple College EMS Professions 35 INTERPERSONAL COMMUNICATION • Be Courteous – Please – Thank you – Yes Ma’am/Sir – No Ma’am/Sir • Be Truthful
  • 36. Temple College EMS Professions 36 INTERPERSONAL COMMUNICATION • Use terms that the pt/Family will understand • Be careful of what you say about the Pt and where you say it • Be aware of your body language
  • 37. Temple College EMS Professions 37 INTERPERSONAL COMMUNICATION • Speak slowly/enunciate • Allow time for the Pt to answer questions
  • 38. Temple College EMS Professions 38 SPECIAL PATIENTS • Non-English speaking – Use Interpreter – Do not attempt language if unsure – Use Flash Cards
  • 39. Temple College EMS Professions 39 SPECIAL PATIENTS • Hearing Impaired – Use Interpreter – Face Pt. when speaking • Allows them to see your lips • Allows them to see your facial expression
  • 40. Temple College EMS Professions 40 SPECIAL PATIENTS • Children – Get on their “level” – Approach slowly – Avoid threatening postures – Explain everything that you do
  • 41. Temple College EMS Professions 41 SPECIAL PATIENTS • Children – Don’t lie – Respect a child’s modesty – Use parents to calm child (If parent is calm) – Let Parent hold child if not contraindicated – Allow child to keep familiar objects
  • 42. Temple College EMS Professions 42 SPECIAL PATIENTS • Elderly – Use last names of older patients until told otherwise – Don’t use slang – Don’t assume senility/deafness/infirmities – Be aware of cultural differences – Don’t rush Pt – Attend to family

Editor's Notes

  1. Temple College EMS Professions