Message from @Lucky Texan

Discord ID: 707446392741953581


2020-05-05 02:55:03 UTC  

I’m not sure.

2020-05-05 03:04:50 UTC  

The CoTCCC board members are active in the community, I can’t remember their names off the top of my head but you could literally just ask them

2020-05-05 03:11:37 UTC  

True.

2020-05-05 07:40:26 UTC  

Hi, I'm an RN and am looking into getting extra classes, how do you all feel about the American red Cross first aid for severe bleeding. It's on sale and doesn't seem like a huge time commitment so I can do it online.

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/704483905885175910/707134600387887114/Screenshot_20200505-033945.png

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/704483905885175910/707134600660385792/Screenshot_20200505-033939.png

2020-05-05 10:35:42 UTC  

i read somewhere that modern superglue was developed by the US military to seal wounds in Vietnam, im pretty intermediate with first aid so i would consider myself proficient, but no expert. would modern superglue be a practical thing in a first aid kit for sealing wounds or would it be something that by today's standards would be considered a last resort? (i mean cyanoacrylate)

2020-05-05 13:16:39 UTC  

@Young Spaghetti it would be decent information.

2020-05-05 13:18:00 UTC  

@Potion Seller theres still a medical glue used to seal some stuff, seen it used a few times. as for if its super glue I dont know and it wouldn't really be a replacement for stitches if you're asking.

2020-05-05 13:19:43 UTC  

@Young Spaghetti I would look for a stop the bleed class of some sort to at least get some hands on. I dont know what area you're in but if you happen to be nearish to a medical college sometimes they have a class for relatively cheap to learn advanced skills. For example, for $150 theres a college near me that lets you practice surgical crics on cadavers.

2020-05-05 14:23:39 UTC  

Community Colleges also tend to have classes.

2020-05-06 03:44:09 UTC  

Howdy y'all

2020-05-06 03:44:21 UTC  

This be my place lol

2020-05-06 03:44:50 UTC  

And superglue yes

2020-05-06 03:45:30 UTC  

Stop the bleeding first. If the wound is actively bleeding you can't do shit. Pressure! Pressure! Pressure!

2020-05-06 03:46:27 UTC  

If the bleeding is controlled and suture material is not availability, pour all the crazy glue you can in that go and push the flesh together

2020-05-06 03:48:25 UTC  

*available *ho

2020-05-06 03:49:02 UTC  

If the bleeding is by any means hemorrhagic, PACK THAT SHIT WITH HEMOSTATIC GAUZE

2020-05-06 03:49:36 UTC  

Every second of hemorrhagic bleeding is a diminished chance of survival after prehospital care

2020-05-06 03:50:19 UTC  

Super glue is for superficial wounds that need help, just like sutures.

2020-05-06 03:51:11 UTC  

You can do all the correct interventions and be dummy slow at it and your patient will still die because of the lowered chance of survival from traumatic injuries

2020-05-06 03:53:32 UTC  

I thought any bleeding is hemorrhagic?

2020-05-06 04:19:23 UTC  

I was EMT-I but I let it go

2020-05-06 05:49:09 UTC  

TQs that are thin, like the RATs, can cause nerve damage upon usage.

2020-05-06 05:51:01 UTC  

> If the bleeding is by any means hemorrhagic, PACK THAT SHIT WITH HEMOSTATIC GAUZE
@RaginMedic23

TQ any wounds that are able to be TQed. Any others, such as at junctions, should be packed and then wrapped with a pressure dressing.

2020-05-06 05:51:43 UTC  

> If the bleeding is by any means hemorrhagic, PACK THAT SHIT WITH HEMOSTATIC GAUZE
@RaginMedic23

Hemorrhage is bleeding. Did you mean arterial bleeding?

2020-05-06 05:55:09 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/704483905885175910/707470491853783105/image0.jpg

2020-05-06 10:41:25 UTC  

Yes. I was taught arterial bleeding as traumatic hemorrhage

2020-05-06 10:42:45 UTC  

Raginmedic have you asked for a role yet?

2020-05-06 14:16:24 UTC  

I have not

2020-05-06 14:54:52 UTC  
2020-05-06 15:16:58 UTC  

Again who here is a Practicing medic?

2020-05-06 15:47:47 UTC  

I’m not certified in anything but I know a thing or two.

2020-05-06 16:51:35 UTC  

What do yalp mean by "pack" the junctions

2020-05-06 16:51:48 UTC  

Just pressure bandage? Or??

2020-05-06 16:57:06 UTC  

@[CA] SoyBoi pack it with hemostatic gauze

2020-05-06 17:24:25 UTC  

Hemostatic gauze and then wrap.

2020-05-06 18:19:03 UTC  

I was a combat medic in the army and am trained on TC3, prolonged field care, field sanitation, disease prevention, fluid resuscitation and some invase interventions as well as pharmacology

2020-05-06 18:22:19 UTC  

18D?

2020-05-06 18:22:33 UTC  

Or just a dedicated 68W?

2020-05-06 18:24:32 UTC  

68W who was blessed enough to sit through some whiskey one training and also held the role of utilizing higher levels of care in the field. Had a good PA and spent all my time on the line with both army and the marines

2020-05-06 18:32:29 UTC  

I see a lot of conversation in here about emergency medical but not a whole lot about what happens after the X, so it is my duty to introduce it to y'all. Since it's a broad topic, I'll start simply with the next thing, evacuation

2020-05-06 18:33:28 UTC  

Well, yes, after CUF and TFC is EVC, but during the situation that we may find ourselves in, EVAC will be few and far between.