Prehospital emergency care : official journal of the National Association of EMS Physicians and the National Association of State EMS Directors
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Randomized Controlled Trial
Ability of Layperson Callers to Apply a Tourniquet Following Protocol-Based Instructions from an Emergency Medical Dispatcher.
Introduction: One of the greatest casualty-care improvements resulting from US military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan has been the reduction of preventable death from massive extremity hemorrhage - largely due to the widespread use of limb tourniquets. More recently, tourniquet use in civilian, prehospital settings has shown promise in reducing deaths in cases of catastrophic arterial limb hemorrhage. Telephone instructions by trained emergency medical dispatchers (EMDs) on applying an available tourniquet may help achieve such a benefit. ⋯ Median tourniquet pressure was 256 mmHg and median-end blood loss was 1,365 mL. A total of 198 participants (80.49%) were able to completely stop the bleeding while 16 participants (6.5%) had the tourniquet applied with some bleeding still occurring, and 32 participants (13.01%) exceeded the threshold of 2,500 mL of blood loss, resulting in the "patient" not surviving. Conclusions: The study findings demonstrated that untrained bystanders provided with instructions via phone from a trained Emergency Medical Dispatcher applied a tourniquet and successfully stopped the bleeding completely in most cases.