The victim would be first placed on a spine board with a cervical collar and head blockers. Once fully secured to the spine board, victim will be put in the Sked to proceed with the extrication
@@ramirez924 A sked should probably used with a backboard most of the time, already. Especially in training. A back board does not fix or reduce Cervical or spinal injuries. It is a spatula to move a person from point A to point B. The backboard provides rigidity to the sked to assist in NOT creating a back/neck injury. Had it been used, this rescue would not have been possible without packaging, un-packaging, then re-packaging the patient. In this scenario, I would definitely not choose the Sked. That last patient movement to transition vertical was terrible! "Do no harm, Do KNOW harm". The Yates SpecPak would be better, by far.
Great job to our man and woman in red!
Thank you!
How would you do a vertical lift if the victim had a neck or back injury
The victim would be first placed on a spine board with a cervical collar and head blockers. Once fully secured to the spine board, victim will be put in the Sked to proceed with the extrication
You could also use a half sked for tight spaces.
@@ramirez924 A sked should probably used with a backboard most of the time, already. Especially in training. A back board does not fix or reduce Cervical or spinal injuries. It is a spatula to move a person from point A to point
B. The backboard provides rigidity to the sked to assist in NOT creating a back/neck injury. Had it been used, this rescue would not have been possible without packaging, un-packaging, then re-packaging the patient. In this scenario, I would definitely not choose the Sked. That last patient movement to transition vertical was terrible! "Do no harm, Do KNOW harm". The Yates SpecPak would be better, by far.