WELCOME TO Medical Emergencies in Cycling COLORADO SPRINGS, USA CYCLING This course is not intended as a substitute for residency, fellowship, or in-practice training. Although every effort has been made to provide safe, actionable advice, participants should be aware that this class does not provide a definitive standard of care, rather, reasonable approaches to common scenarios which may occur at cycling events in particular, the dynamic, uncontrolled, and even moving environment of care. Practitioners intending to serve races are obliged to obtain full training in aspects of care relevant to competitive cycling. Taking this course, no matter how successfully, does not guarantee competency. Neither USA Cycling nor the University of California, San Francisco provides any warrantee of fitness nor suitability for any specific event. The participant is encouraged to understand needs and resources, particularly among the scene responders who provide field care and from emergency medical facilities located near events. Cycling, and life in general, are known to the State of California to be hazardous.
WELCOME AND INTRODUCTIONS Background of course Motivations Speaker introductions Student introductions Schedule plan (next slide) Limitations of course Disclosures
MECC 2014 Origins Where did this course originate? Demand How was it designed? We acquired it from USSA no endorsement or warranty What are other models? ATLS (stations, initial care), ABLS (field, skin, multidisciplinary) no endorsement or warranty
MECC 2014 Goals What we do Illustrate important scenarios Provide general principles Simulate the real thing Identify resources Introduce the multi disciplinary nature of cycle racing What we don t do Dictate treatment regimes Guarantee your competence Cover all eventualities Substitute for experience Offer guidelines for care
MECC 2014 Objectives We hope to convey Differences between scene care and hospital/clinic Reasonable scenarios and principles for addressing Providing reasonable simulations of common injury scenarios Identify resources for further care Introduce the concept of working with diverse responder groups Familiarize participants with the unique logistical challenges in cycling
Further learning General interest Airway courses (e.g. EM, ASA) Local and event EMS, prehospital ACS (e.g., ATLS) ABS (e.g., ABLS) AHA (e.g., ACLS) Specialized courses (e.g., PALS, EMT, evacuation) First-responder courses
Intro Lectures 8-815 Intro (Dr Jamie Watkins and Dr Aaron Goldberg) 820-850 Airway (Dr Aaron Goldberg) 855-925 Race event planning equipment prep (Mark Alberg Athletic Trainer) 930-1000 C spine and Head trauma (Myles Sibley Vail EMS) 1005-1035 Scene Management EMS integration transport decisions (Steve Zuckerman Vail EMS) 1040-1110 Acute Wound Management (Dr Jamie Watkins) Break 1110-1130 Rotating stations start at 1130am each station lasts 30 minutes with lunch break at 1230-110p 1130-1200 1200-1230 (LUNCH 1230-110) 110-140 140-210 210-240 Head and Neck Myles Sibley and Jeff Wayland Road Rash Happy Freedman Ortho splinting Steve Zuckerman and Mark Alberg Airway/Thoracic Dr. Aaron Goldberg and Dr. Mark Greve Rider Down Dr. James Watkins and Loy Osburn
Groups 1 2 3 4 5 Ken Bell Drew Geer Lawrence Herberholz Dean Traiger Kristie Nichols Angela Cortez Van Geslani Stephen Green Steve Kwan Eric Kuhns Cecily Arenas Megan Drew Helaine Green David Magnussen Eric Riley Tsz Chung Chong Jim Dougherty Eric Eidem Steve Parcell Melissa Shays Richard Walker
Stations and Groups TIme Airway Head & Neck 11:30-12:00 12:00-12:30 Road Rash Ortho 1 2 3 4 5 5 1 2 3 4 1:10-1:40 4 5 1 2 3 Scenario 1:40-2:10 3 4 5 1 2 2:10-2:40 2 3 4 5 1
MECC 2014 Questions/Comments Tell us about: the course (we have no agenda other than you) Duration, Depth, Scope the faculty (we are not full-time educators nor is there an agreed-upon syllabus nor standard of care) how you want to contribute (see above)
MECC 2014 Acknowledgements Eagle County AMR USSA