Emergency War Surgery NATO Handbook: Part II: Response of the
Body to Wounding: Chapter IX: Shock and Resuscitation
Equipment and Supplies
United States Department of Defense
Peer Review Status: Internally Peer
Reviewed
Equipment and Supplies
- The frames upon which stretchers will be placed should always
be in position, carefully arranged to allow enough space between
patients for easy movement. A minimum of other furnishing is
necessary. Aside from a desk or countertop work space for record
keeping, there should be no chairs or furniture about the working
area. Stethoscopes, sphygmomanometers, intravenous administration
sets, IV fluids, and devices for suspension of IV bottles or bags
should be at every stretcher position.
- Sterile prepacked sets for emergency procedures, such as
cutdowns, tracheostomies, insertions of chest tubes, and control
of bleeding, should be conveniently located. These sets must
include all of the instruments, sutures, and fittings needed for
the purpose and should be plainly marked.
- Suction equipment must be immediately available for airway
aspiration.
- Laryngoscopes and endotracheal tubes with inflatable cuffs
should be conveniently located in the resuscitation area.
Oropharyngeal airways prevent the tongue front obstructing the
oropharynx in the unconscious patient. Insertion of the
endotracheal tube is a rapid means of assuring upper airway
integrity and facilitates the later performance of a tracheostomy
under more controlled circumstances. A ventilating bag with mask
and endotracheal tube fittings for manual ventilation should be
available at numerous locations.
- Large bandage scissors should be in each corpsman's pocket and
at numerous other places to allow quick removal of the
clothing.
- Intravenous fluids, in large quantities, should be immediately
available in the triage area. One bottle of Ringer's lactate with
tubing inserted should be hung in place over each set of litter
frames. A blood filtration set should be at hand for those who
require subsequent administration of blood.
- Percutaneous venous catheters are preferable to needles in
administering intravenous fluids. The intravenous pathway should
be at least 18 gauge.
- Large-bore catheters for chest drainage and sterile tubing for
insertion of underwater drainage or suction should be available.
Heimlich one-way valves attached to chest tubing are acceptable
only for temporary purposes.
- Quantities of prepackaged sterile dressings in various sizes
should be in ample supply at every stretcher.
- Prepackaged sterile syringes in 5, 10, and 20 ml sizes should
he within reach. In addition, preheparinized 5 ml syringes should
be available for blood gas determination samples.
- Sterile prepackaged sets of urinary catheters will be needed
and should be available. Only large balloon Foley catheters should
be used.
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