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Scenario โ€” Thoracic trauma with developing tension pneumothorax following crowd crush
Patient Information
Dispatch
You are called to a 35YO male at the Subiaco AFL stadium who has been crushed against a barrier during crowd movement at half-time. Security staff report he is conscious but in significant respiratory distress. (Marcus Henley)
Incident History
Pt was pressed against a steel crowd control barrier by a surge of fans exiting the stands. Bystanders report he was trapped for approximately 2 minutes before crowd dispersed. Pt is now sitting on the ground, leaning forward, holding his right chest, in visible respiratory distress.
Emergency Contact
Renee Henley (Wife) 0412 774 093
Response
Alert
Airway
Patent. No foreign body or obstruction. Pt speaking in short phrases only. No stridor at this time.
Breathing
Laboured. RR 24. Markedly reduced air entry right chest on auscultation. Paradoxical movement of right lateral chest wall consistent with flail segment. Accessory muscle use present. Nil audible wheeze.
Circulation
Radial pulse rapid and weak. Skin pale and diaphoretic. No external haemorrhage identified. Trachea midline on initial assessment.
Disability
GCS 15 (E4V5M6). Alert and orientated to time, place and person. Anxious and distressed.
Exposure
Significant bruising and swelling over right lateral chest wall (ribs 4โ€“8 region). No open wounds. No abdominal bruising or tenderness on palpation. No other injuries identified.
Vitals
Time SpO2 Resp Dist RR Pulse BP CRT GCS PERL Temp BGL Pain
Initial 91% (RA) Moderate 24 112 108/74 3s 15 4 4 ++ โ€“ โ€“ 9
10 mins 84% (O2 NRB 15L/min) Severe 32 130 88/60 4s 12 4 4 + โ€“ โ€“ 10
History Taking
Signs/Symptoms
Severe right-sided chest pain, increasing shortness of breath, sensation of chest tightening, dizziness.
Onset
Immediate following crush injury approximately 10 minutes ago.
Pain
Severe right lateral chest pain, sharp, constant, worsening with every breath.
Quality
Sharp, stabbing.
Radiates
Nil radiation. Localised to right lateral chest.
Severity
9/10 initially, escalating to 10/10.
Allergies
Nil known.
Medications
Nil regular medications.
Pertinent History
Fit and well. No prior respiratory or cardiac conditions. Non-smoker.
Last Oral Intake
Meat pie and soft drink approximately 1 hour ago at the game.
Treatment
Nil. Security staff moved him away from barrier and called for EHS.
Events Leading
Standing in a packed aisle attempting to exit at half-time when crowd surged and pressed him into a steel barrier at chest height.
Scenario Progression and Treatment Objectives

((If oxygen is not applied within 2 minutes of first contact, SpO2 drops to 87% on room air and patient becomes more agitated and distressed โ€” prompt: 'Marcus is becoming increasingly anxious and says he cannot breathe properly.'))

((If trainee does not perform respiratory auscultation and identify absent right-sided breath sounds, the facilitator announces at the 5-minute mark: 'Marcus tells you the right side of his chest feels like it is being squeezed tighter โ€” his breathing is getting worse.'))

((If the developing tension pneumothorax signs โ€” tracheal deviation LEFT, absent right breath sounds, worsening hypotension, and falling SpO2 despite high-flow oxygen โ€” are not identified and communicated urgently to the facilitator/ambulance by the 8-minute mark, GCS drops to 12, BP drops to 88 systolic, and facilitator announces: 'You notice Marcus's trachea appears to be shifted slightly to the LEFT when you reassess his neck.'))

((If the occlusive dressing โ€” three sides taped โ€” is applied to a wound that does not exist and trainee has not correctly identified this is a CLOSED chest injury, facilitator corrects: 'On reassessment, there is no open chest wound โ€” this is a closed injury. How does your management change?'))

((If paradoxical chest movement is not identified and documented, facilitator prompts: 'As Marcus exhales, you notice the right lateral chest wall moves inward โ€” what does this suggest?'))

((If trainee attempts to remove or reposition the patient to standing to assist with breathing and SpO2 immediately drops further: 'Marcus states he feels faint when you try to stand him up โ€” his blood pressure is now 88 systolic.'))

This patient is suffering from thoracic trauma with multiple right-sided rib fractures causing a flail chest segment, with a developing right-sided tension pneumothorax.

  • Ensure scene safety โ€” assess environment at Subiaco AFL stadium for ongoing crowd movement risk prior to approaching patient.
  • Don appropriate PPE โ€” gloves minimum; consider eye protection given mechanism.
  • Perform Primary Survey with C-spine consideration โ€” mechanism (crush/barrier impact) raises suspicion for spinal injury; use jaw thrust if airway manoeuvre required.
  • Assess airway โ€” confirm patent, patient speaking in short phrases; note increasing distress.
  • Assess breathing โ€” identify raised respiratory rate (24), reduced air entry right chest on auscultation, paradoxical movement right lateral chest wall (flail segment), accessory muscle use; document findings.
  • Apply high-flow oxygen immediately via Non-Rebreather Mask (NRB) at 10โ€“15 L/min โ€” titrate SpO2 to target 94โ€“98%.
  • Reassess breathing after oxygen application โ€” note SpO2 response; if SpO2 does not improve or deteriorates despite NRB oxygen, escalate urgency.
  • Stabilise flail chest segment โ€” apply gentle supporting hand pressure over right lateral chest wall to reduce paradoxical movement and improve ventilatory mechanics; position patient towards injured (right) side in a position of comfort.
  • Perform Secondary/CNS Survey โ€” systematic head-to-toe assessment; palpate chest wall for crepitus, tenderness, deformity; note bruising right ribs 4โ€“8; reassess tracheal position (initially midline โ€” monitor for deviation).
  • Perform pain assessment โ€” document pain score 9/10; note EHS analgesic options are limited to Methoxyflurane (Penthrox); however Methoxyflurane is CONTRAINDICATED in patients unable to cooperate or with significant respiratory distress and altered consciousness โ€” reassess patient's ability to self-administer safely.
  • Reassess vitals at 5-minute intervals given time-critical presentation โ€” note any deterioration in SpO2, BP, HR, GCS, RR.
  • Identify signs of developing tension pneumothorax โ€” reassess for: tracheal deviation (LEFT shift), absent or further reduced breath sounds right, worsening hypotension (BP <90 systolic), increasing tachycardia, falling GCS despite oxygen โ€” these are red flags for tension pneumothorax.
  • Recognise tension pneumothorax is DEVELOPING and is outside EHS scope to treat definitively โ€” needle thoracocentesis is Advanced Care and above; EHS role is RAPID identification and urgent escalation.
  • Escalate immediately โ€” call for ambulance Priority 1 via State Operations Centre; pre-notify receiving hospital of suspected tension pneumothorax; request Advanced Care Paramedic response.
  • If occlusive dressing is considered โ€” clarify this is a CLOSED chest injury with no open wound; occlusive dressing applies to open/sucking chest wounds only; do NOT apply to this patient.
  • Position patient โ€” position of comfort leaning towards injured right side; do NOT lay flat if SpO2 deteriorating; maintain spinal precautions if mechanism warrants.
  • Assist ventilations via BVM if patient's spontaneous respiratory effort becomes inadequate โ€” ventilate gently at no more than 4โ€“6 breaths per minute to minimise air trapping and avoid worsening pneumothorax; do not over-ventilate.
  • Monitor continuously โ€” GCS, SpO2, RR, BP, HR, respiratory pattern, tracheal position; record full observations every 5 minutes given time-critical status.
  • Reassure patient continuously โ€” calm, clear communication; explain each intervention.
  • Minimise on-scene time โ€” package patient for urgent transport; perform ongoing management en route.
  • Scenario ends on arrival of ambulance and IMISTAMBO handover.
  • Attention to hand hygiene will be given throughout the scenario.

Clinical references: Thoracic Trauma ยท Pneumothorax ยท Haemorrhage ยท Primary Survey ยท Secondary & CNS Survey ยท Oxygen Delivery ยท Bag Valve Mask Ventilation ยท Auscultation