Had a case involving a level 1 trauma needing massive transfusion the other day and a few questions came up I was hoping to run by others. Major MVC with pelvic bleeding, traumatic arm amputation. Ended up getting the thoracotomy, cardiac massage, and eventually expired. Transfused around 50 units total in about 45 mins worth of time.
We are taught crisis resource management to "step back" and to delegate to others. I find it uncomfortable in the real-world scenarios to "leave the pocket" maybe because I feel like I get disconnected from the information and/or it gets done better if I do it myself (which can be a setup for tunnel vision). Does anyone intentionally step back and allow others to take over that space while directing from afar?
Any general sage advice or personal approaches you developed in these cases for how to keep a handle on the situation? Have you developed any protocol within yourself so that you systematically work through these high stakes cases?
We are taught crisis resource management to "step back" and to delegate to others. I find it uncomfortable in the real-world scenarios to "leave the pocket" maybe because I feel like I get disconnected from the information and/or it gets done better if I do it myself (which can be a setup for tunnel vision). Does anyone intentionally step back and allow others to take over that space while directing from afar?
Any general sage advice or personal approaches you developed in these cases for how to keep a handle on the situation? Have you developed any protocol within yourself so that you systematically work through these high stakes cases?