Advanced Training Cuts Car Crash Extrication Time
Researchers at the Medical College of Wisconsin continue to
explore ways to improve outcomes for victims of automobile
crashes. Using a full-scale vehicle crash laboratory and
facilities dedicated to the study of impact biomechanics, they
are working to enhance the team skills of emergency responders
and reduce the time it takes to get people to trauma centers,
as well as improving how they deal with serious injuries.
One test conducted in 2005 showed that advanced training
enabled a team of firefighters to significantly reduce the
time it took to extricate two dummies from a mock car crash.
Working in collaboration with SAFE (Safe & Fast
Extrication, Inc.), the researchers set up a drill scenario of
a T-bone crash (in which one car hits the other in the side)
with two cars colliding at 40 miles per hour. The firefighters
took 57 minutes to complete the extrication before the
training. After the training, the same firefighters did the
job in less than 20 minutes.
"There are two aspects to the extrication that we deal
with," said Frank A. Pintar, PhD, Medical College
Professor of Neurosurgery. "The SAFE organization actually
trains the firefighters to improve their extrication methods.
By extrication I mean moving metal in the vehicle to free an
occupant so that they can be taken to a Level One trauma
center. Dealing with the car issues and getting the person out
of the car is the first aspect.
"The other aspect is the way severe injuries are dealt
with. What do you do with a spinal cord injury patient? What
do you do with a person who has a collapsed lung? Those issues
are more medical and we've just scratched the surface on how
we could actually improve those immediate first-responder
methods when applied to the victim of the crash.
"So, in spinal cord injury the first step we've taken is to
see how the stabilization procedures currently in use affect
the movement of the head-neck complex of an injured occupant.
We do that we with sophisticated monitoring equipment,
something no one else seems to be doing right now."
The "Incident Commander" Approach Firefighter
training and certification in Wisconsin is defined in levels:
level one is sufficient to work as a firefighter but does not
include crash extrication; level two includes extrication but
is not required by the state. The advanced training used in
the research goes beyond the current levels and indicators to
date show that it will save lives, said Dr. Pintar.
"We were actually quite surprised at how that extrication
time could improve so dramatically," said Dr. Pintar of the
staged field test. "But watching several firefighting teams do
this in different circumstances helps our understanding.
That's the reason why our crash lab has a consistent scenario
for them to work on, so we can actually measure the
differences.
"The advanced method has a team approach with a single
'incident commander' who calls out signals and looks at the
operation from the whole perspective. The commander is an
experienced responder who assesses the situation and is
barking out orders. The rest of the team is following those
orders and all of them have roles, so everything is happening
at once. We've seen that the teams without an incident
commander extricate more slowly. Having someone in charge who
is not otherwise distracted, keeping things organized, seems
to be a very critical part of reducing time."
"Cross Training" and the Golden Hour Another
aspect of the advanced approach could be called "cross
training," being sure that several individuals on a responding
team are able to use all of the available tools. "With
everyone trained in multiple tools, the incident commander can
say 'remove the windshield glass' or 'stabilize the car' and
they'll pick up the appropriate tool to do the job," Dr.
Pintar notes.
"If all of the individuals are trained on multiple tools to
accomplish the same thing in different ways, that saves time.
For example, you don't want to have just one person that can
use Jaws of Life (a device that can literally pull a car
apart). We've seen incidents where one person in a unit was
trained on Jaws of Life by the manufacturer, so nobody else
will even touch that equipment if that person doesn't show up.
Dr. Pintar noted that current training conducted at state
technical colleges shows firefighters how to work with the
tools and how to perform specific procedures such as removing
car roofs, but it does not give the team approach training at
the advanced level. While a few departments are now using
advanced training, he said, it will not be widely available
without changes in state requirements and a modest dedicated
funding source. Funding to train additional units at the
advanced level is being applied for, said Dr. Pintar.
"Teams perform vehicle crashes more often than they fight
fires," said Dr. Pintar. "The more units that we can get out
there with advanced training, the higher your chances of
surviving these crashes. Period. Imagine going from 60 minutes
down to 20 minutes for extrication, and getting to the
hospital in time. That means there's a chance of not bleeding
to death, a chance of stabilizing an otherwise un-survivable
crash.
"It's the 'golden hour' principle," Dr. Pintar notes,
referring to the belief that getting a victim to the hospital
within an hour greatly increases the chance of survival.
"That's the goal of SAFE. They strongly believe that in every
crash, no matter how challenging, the people should be out
within twenty minutes or less. A rollover, in a ditch, up
against a wall, whatever, they believe that if it's a properly
trained unit they will know what to do to get the job done
safely and quickly."
Dan Ullrich HealthLink Contributing Writer
Funding for this research was provided partly by the CDC
Injury Research Center at the Medical College of
Wisconsin, the Department of Veterans Affairs Medical
Research, the National Spinal Cord Injury Association, and the
Department
of Neurosurgery at the Medical College of Wisconsin.
Article Created: 2006-10-30 Article
Reviewed: 2006-10-30
MCW Health News presents up-to-date
information on patient care and medical research by the
physicians of the Medical College of Wisconsin.
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