The Foundations Of Emergency Care

Front Cover
McGraw-Hill Education (UK), 2006 M12 1 - 312 pages
"...it is refreshing to review a book that doesn’t claim to include everything but literally provides a foundation by focusing upon key areas within Emergency Care – to borrow that hackneyed phrase – “it does what it says on the tin”!"
Tim Barr, Cardiff University, UK

The Foundations of Emergency Care is an accessible text that brings together both academic and clinical experts to combine coverage of the clinical skills and underpinning theoretical knowledge essential to practice within the modern emergency setting.

Using an evidenced-based and protocol driven approach, this clinical companion guides readers through a multitude of common patient scenarios, to help them acquire essential skills in assessment and priority assignment in an emergency care setting.

Each chapter includes scenarios that utilise common emergency care presentations to clearly demonstrate how practitioners can identify critical illness at an early stage through understanding how disease and illness affect normal physiology and how this relates to the patient’s clinical presentation. This ability to critically analyse physical findings assists the practitioner in becoming a specialist and directly saves lives.

Key areas covered include:

  • Cardiac Emergencies: including the new 2006 ALS guidelines
  • Head Injuries
  • Acute Surgical Emergencies
  • Gynaecologic and Obstetric Emergencies
  • Respiratory Distress
  • Paediatric Emergencies
  • Minor Trauma and Illness
  • Major Trauma
  • Acute Medical Emergencies
The book also includes scenarios that cover the treatment of the elderly and those presenting with mental health emergencies.

This important new book encourages readers to reflect on their clinical encounters to gain further insight into relevant treatment options and illustrates how critical thinking can be applied in emergency care.

Essential reading for healthcare professionals working within emergency care and students requiring the fundamental skills necessary to competently undertake patient assessment and correctly prioritise patient care.

From inside the book

Contents

Chapter 1 Introduction to emergency care
1
prioritizing care delivery
6
implications in clinical practice
30
Chapter 4 Minor injury and illness
63
assessment prioritization and initial treatment
110
Chapter 6 Gynaecological and obstetric emergencies
139
Chapter 7 Acute surgical emergencies
155
Chapter 8 Head injuries
181
Chapter 10 Medical emergencies
227
Chapter 11 Paediatric emergencies
258
List of figures tables boxes and scenarios
277
References
281
Index
293
THE USE OF COUNSELLING SKILLS IN THEEMERGENCY SERVICES
295
COUNSELLING SKILLS FOR NURSES MIDWIVES ANDHEALTH VISITORS
296
Back Cover
297

Chapter 9 Respiratory emergencies
202

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About the author (2006)

Cliff Evans has been the Emergency Department Lecturer for TVU and NW London for 3 years, teaching the Emergency BSc to all local Emergency Departments.

Emma Tippins is Senior Sister for Practice Development at Chelsea and Westminster Hospital.

Contributors:
Michelle Stanton, Senior Lecturer at TVU
Paul Newcombe, Senior Lecturer, St Georges University of London
Claire Washbourne, ED Consultant Nurse (Minor injury), C&W
Andrew Fraser, Emergency Consultant, Newham Hospital

Bibliographic information