"Scoop and run", "stay and play" or "play and run"?
The strategy developped for prehospital care in North America is called scoop and run. It is based on the golden hour concept, i.e. the best chances for the victim in case of a severe trauma is to have surgery within one hour, especially in case of internal bleeding. Thus, the minimal prehospital care are performed (A.B.C., stop the external bleeding, cover the injuries, spine immobilisation, endotracheal intubation) and the victim is transported as fast as possible to the most adapted trauma center.
The stay and play strategy was designed in France with the SMUR (Service mobile d'urgence de réanimation, emergency mobile resuscitation unit) and SAMU (Service d'aide médicale d'urgence, i.e. EMS), as they noted that most of time, the victim died during transportation. They developped a strategy based on maximum cares before transportation, the prehospital cares are made by a MD, a nurse and an ambulance technician, with almost all the equipment and drugs that can be found in an emergency department (there is no paramedic). The priority here is the stabilisation, including intravenous drip to rise the blood pressure (one of the causes of death during transportation is the drop of the pressure perfusion of the brain and heart due to the accelerations, see shock). In case of a severe myocardial infarction (or heart attack), all the cares are performed onsite (including possibly thrombolysis), and the victim is transported only if the heart starts again or is declared dead: the time for a victime to be evacuated is longer than the time for the medical team to come to the victim because of the scoop (the defibrilation is performed by a firefighter rescue team with an automated external defibrillator if it arrives before the medical team).
Both strategies have their advantages and drawbacks. The confrontation of these two opposite experiences led recently to a new concept: the play and run. In this strategy, the time that cannot be reduced (e.g. while freeing a victim trapped in a car) is used to perform cares, and the aim is no longer to recover a "normal" blood pressure, but a minimal blood pressure, using not only intravenous drip but also vasopressing drugs and antishock pants (to compress the legs and push the blood into the rest of the body). The aim is to reduce the risk of death due to transportation trauma and to respect the golden hour.
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See also: trauma center, battlefield medicine