Pediatric Polytrauma Fire Victim Simulation
Lauren Vrablik, Robyn Wing

TL;DR
This paper describes a simulation training case for emergency medicine providers to manage a rare but complex pediatric trauma involving fire and toxic exposures.
Contribution
The paper introduces a novel simulation combining mechanical trauma, thermal injury, and toxic exposures in a pediatric context.
Findings
Forty learners participated and found the case relevant to their work.
Learners showed high confidence in managing CO and CN toxicities after the simulation.
The simulation effectively prepared providers for multisystem trauma in rare pediatric fire-related scenarios.
Abstract
Pediatric trauma has long been one of the primary contributors to pediatric mortality. There are multiple cases in the literature involving cyanide (CN) toxicity, carbon monoxide (CO) toxicity, and smoke inhalation with thermal injury, but none in combination with mechanical trauma. In this 45-minute simulation case, emergency medicine residents and fellows were asked to manage a pediatric patient with multiple life-threatening traumatic and metabolic concerns after being extracted from a van accident with a resulting fire. Providers were expected to identify and manage the patient's airway, burns, hemoperitoneum, and CO and CN toxicities. Forty learners participated in this simulation, the majority of whom had little prior clinical experience managing the concepts highlighted in it. All agreed or strongly agreed that the case was relevant to their work. After participation, learner…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDisaster Response and Management · Cardiac Arrest and Resuscitation · Trauma and Emergency Care Studies
