Title: Pre-Hospital Response to Events Involving Radioactive Materials
1Pre-Hospital Response to Events Involving
Radioactive Materials
- Robert C. Beauchamp, RN BSN CEN NREMT-P
- REAC/TS
- Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education
2OBJECTIVE
- Assist pre-hospital responders in the initial
management of a radiation accident/incident. - Identify potential hazards when responding to a
radiation accident
3On Scene Basic Priorities
- Safety of responders
- Safety of victims
- Course of action development
- Contamination control
- Consequence management
Dont be a Victim
4Safety of Responders
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6Safety of Victims
- Physical hazards at the scene are most likely to
force immediate evacuation - At some scenes the chemical nature of the
contaminant may be more of a threat to the
patient than its radioactivity - Immediate life-threatening problems will be
medical and/or trauma in nature and must be cared
for.
7Victim Risk Analysis
- Physical hazards assessment of the Scene.
- Life threatening dangers to the victim.
- Radiation level
- (accumulated dose to rescuers/victim)
- Irradiation vs Contamination
- Types of Contamination (a, b, g)
- Area contamination status fixed, airborne, liquids
8Mitigating the Radiation Exposure Hazard
- Limit time devoted to on scene treatments,
remember the Golden Hour. - Have a plan and stay focused.
- Perform only the skills needed to sustain life
while on the scene. - ABC, C-Spine, Massive external bleeding, major
fracture stabilization
9Do not let Radiation fears exceed patient needs.
10Course of Action Development
- Scope of the Response
- Team Organization (availability)
- OIC prior to IC identification
- Haz/Mat, Medics. Firefighters, Police, ? Field
Deployment Medical Team(s) - PPE considerations public safety, police, fire,
EMS, and hospital staff
11Course of Action Development (cont.)
- Equipment Survey meters, dosimeters, medical
gear, litter device, extrication equipment,
sheets. - Ingress Egress routes with control measures
- On-scene actions TREAT LIFE THREATS Evacuation,
search, medical care, victim identification
12EPA Emergency Dose Guidelines
- No individual shall be required to perform rescue
actions that might involve substantial personal
risk.
13EPA Emergency Dose GuidelinesManual Of
Protective Action Guides And Protective Actions
For Nuclear Incidents, United States
Environmental Protection Agency, October 1991,
Table 2-2.
Dose Limit (rem) Activity Condition
5 all
10 Protecting valuable property Lower dose not practicable
25 Life saving or protection of large populations Lower dose not practicable
gt25 Lifesaving or protection of large populations Only on a voluntary basis to persons fully aware of the risks involved
14Contamination Control
- Most contamination will be on clothes. At least
outer clothing should be removed before transport
of patient to hospital (to minimize spread of
contamination to ambulance and ED). - As much as possible, leave contaminated materials
(including the clothes that were removed) at the
incident scene. If receiving facility can
identify source double bag and take it with you. - Send victims identification (in plastic baggie)
to the ED with the victim.
15Contamination Control
- Use sheet or pillowcase to keep from kneeling on
contaminated ground - Place equipment in plastic bags. Take in only the
equipment you need. - Cover exposed surfaces in ambulance with
plastic/sheet. Dont create a hazard for
yourself. - Delineate the contaminated area (signage, tape,
markings)
16Contamination Control
- Restrict access to essential personnel
resources - Designate entry exit points
- Provide radiation monitoring at all entry and
exit portals if possible - Establish decontamination sites as dictated by
patient medical status - Limit removal of items from contaminated areas
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18Multi-Casualty Radiation Incident/Triage Site
- Pass victims across control line to ambulance
gurney. - Package for transport.
19Lets Rescue a Patient From a Radioactively
Contaminated Area
20Normal Routine
21Radioactive Contamination Protocol
22But I dont have special suits!
23Donning PPE
- Put on outer garment or scrubs (local protocol)
- Put on shoe covers (local protocol)
- Put on inner gloves (blue)
- Tape sleeves and pants legs (masking tape/duct
tape) - Outer gloves (two pair)
- Head cover
- Face shield
- Mask (airway protection per local protocol)
24Taping
25Approaching the Scene
- Initial Decision Tree
- Are there chemical, physical or radiological
threats to the responders? - Are there patients to be treated?
- If radiation is the threat, then treat life
threatening problems and remove patients from
area.
26What are the Contamination Levels?Is it Safe to
Enter?
27Yep, its Safe
28- Check patient/pre-rolled three sheets
29Remove ClothesCut Away From Airway
30Roll Contamination Away From Patient
31- Cover and Roll Contaminated Clothing In Sheet 1
32- Contaminated Clothing Now Contained
- Roll Sheet Away From Airway
33- Place Backboard Under Sheet 2
- Clean Patient
- Clean BackboardCocoon
34Sheet 3 Provides a Clean Platform Leave at
Scene
35Removing PPE
- Outer booties (if worn)
- Outer gloves
- Pass dosimeter across control line (if used)
- Remove tape at cuffs and sleeves
- Head cover and face protection
- Outer garments (over shoe covers)
- Remove one shoe cover at a time/survey bottom of
shoe/step across control line - Remove inner gloves/drop back into contaminated
trash - Total body survey
36Consequence Management of a Radiation Event
- Continued medical support to
- victims responders
- Environmental clean-up decontamination
- Bioassays screening and, if indicated, whole-body
counting - Decorporation therapy (if indicated)
- Psychological counseling support
- Follow-up assistance
37Suggestions
- Assure warmth for disrobed victims.
- Showering of victims is NOT normally indicated.
- Control run-off of decon solution to avoid
tracking to clean areas.
38What Have We Learned?
- Radiation incidents are manageable
- Immediate actions are related to medical needs
and are not related to radiation exposure or
contamination issues. - Ionizing radiation is detectable and measurable.
- YOU CAN SEE IT WITH A METER
- Responders can safely care for contaminated
victims.
39Whats the BIG picture
40? ? ? Questions ? ? ?