How is severe acute anaphylaxis treated both pre-hospital


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What signs and symptoms would alert you, as the paramedic, that a patient is potentially septic or in septic shock and how would you manage them? What specific criteria are used on arrival at hospital to allocate such patients to specialised care under the "code sepsis" pathway?

"Time is brain" is a catchcry used in stroke to emphasise the need for prompt medical intervention. Paramedics have a role in the coordinated approach to stroke management which aims to prevent unnecessary delays in accessing stroke team care. What assessment tools do paramedics use to identify stroke and how do they manage stroke patients?

What signs and symptoms do patients with a pulmonary embolus (PE) present with? What clinical criteria are used in hospital to predict a likely PE or rule it out as a diagnosis, thus determining the need for further diagnostic testing (such as D-Dimer, CT, MRI or V/Q scans)?

How is severe acute anaphylaxis treated both pre-hospital (ambulance) and in the emergency department? How do these measures alleviate or reverse symptoms?

What causes tuberculosis and how is it transmitted? What factors are behind the increase of the condition in Australia and who is most at risk of infection? How is the condition treated?

With vaccination rates falling, there has been an increase in the rates of diseases such as measles, mumps and pertussis (whooping cough).

Discuss the mode of transmission and presenting signs and symptoms of these conditions and include the complications of infection that can arise, where applicable.

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