Scenario — COPD Exacerbation in elderly female at community fair
intermediate Respiratory · Elderly · 75yr · female
Patient Information
| Dispatch | You are called to the FAP at the Fremantle Community Fair for a 75YO female (Margaret Doyle) who is having trouble breathing. Bystanders say she has been struggling for the past 10 minutes. |
| Patient | Margaret Doyle — 75yr (60kg) |
| Incident History | Pt was browsing the market stalls when she became increasingly short of breath. A stall holder helped her to the FAP. Pt is visibly distressed and using accessory muscles to breathe. |
| Emergency Contact | Susan Doyle (Daughter) — 0412 774 391 |
Initial Rapid Assessment
| Response | Alert |
| Airway | Patent. Nil obstruction. Nil stridor. Able to speak in short phrases only. |
| Breathing | Increased work of breathing. Audible expiratory wheeze. Use of accessory muscles. RR elevated. SpO2 low on room air. |
| Circulation | Radial pulse present — rapid and regular. Skin warm, mild peripheral cyanosis noted to fingertips. No active bleeding. |
| Disability | GCS 15 (E4V5M6). Alert and orientated to time, place and person. Anxious. |
| Exposure | No rashes or visible injuries. Barrel-shaped chest noted. Pursed-lip breathing observed. |
Vitals
| Time | SpO2 | Resp Dist | RR | Pulse | BP | CRT | GCS | PERL | Temp | BGL | Pain |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Initial | 84% (RA) | Moderate | 26 | 108 | 148/88 | <2s | 15 | 3 3 ++ | 37.1 | – | 3 |
| 10 mins | 90% (O2 NC 2L/min) | Mild | 20 | 96 | 144/86 | <2s | 15 | 3 3 ++ | 37.1 | – | 2 |
History Taking
| Signs/Symptoms | Increasing shortness of breath, expiratory wheeze, tight chest. Productive cough with increased yellow sputum over the past three days. |
| Allergies | Penicillin — rash |
| Medications | Tiotropium inhaler (once daily), Salbutamol MDI (as needed), Perindopril 5mg daily, Atorvastatin 40mg daily. |
| Pertinent History | Known COPD diagnosed 8 years ago — on home oxygen at 1L/min overnight. Ex-smoker, 40 pack-year history. Hypertension. No previous intubations. Last GP review 2 months ago. |
| Last Oral Intake | Cup of tea and toast approximately 2 hours ago. |
| Events Leading | Patient was walking around the outdoor market stalls in the warm weather. Became progressively more breathless and distressed over 10 minutes. |
| Treatment Prior | Used her own Salbutamol MDI twice before arriving at the FAP — minimal relief. |
| Onset | Progressive worsening over the past three days, acute deterioration in the last 10–15 minutes at the fair. |
| Pain | Mild chest tightness 3/10. No sharp or pleuritic pain. |
| Quality | Difficulty breathing, wheezy, feels like she cannot get air out fully. |
| Radiates | Nil |
| Severity | 3/10 chest tightness |
Scenario Progression and Treatment Objectives
Diagnosis
This patient is suffering from an acute exacerbation of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD).
Facilitator Triggers — if trainees miss a critical step
- ! (If oxygen is applied at high flow — e.g. NRB 15L/min — without titration, patient's SpO2 rises above 92% and she becomes progressively drowsy over 5 minutes, GCS drops to 13. Facilitator prompts: 'She seems to be getting sleepier — her breathing is slowing down.')
- ! (If no oxygen is applied within 3 minutes of assessment, patient's SpO2 drops to 80% on room air and respiratory distress escalates to severe — accessory muscle use increases and she is unable to complete sentences.)
- ! (If trainee attempts to administer Salbutamol via MDI without a spacer, facilitator prompts: 'She is struggling to coordinate her breathing with the inhaler — what else do you have available?')
- ! (If trainee fails to ask about home oxygen or COPD history, the patient volunteers: 'I use oxygen at night, love — I've got the lung disease.')
Treatment Objectives
- 1. Ensure scene safety and don appropriate PPE. Perform hand hygiene.
- 2. Conduct Primary Survey — confirm patent airway, assess breathing (audible wheeze, elevated RR, accessory muscle use), assess circulation, assess GCS.
- 3. Position patient upright or in position of comfort — do NOT lay patient flat.
- 4. Apply pulse oximetry (SpO2 monitoring) and obtain initial observations including RR, HR, BP, temp.
- 5. Administer oxygen via nasal cannula at 1–2 L/min — titrate carefully to target SpO2 of 88–92% (COPD target). Do NOT apply non-rebreather mask without careful monitoring. Adjust flow rate up or down to maintain target range.
- 6. Obtain IMISTAMBO history — confirm known COPD, current medications (including own Salbutamol MDI use prior to arrival), allergies, last oral intake.
- 7. Recognise that Salbutamol administration for COPD bronchospasm is Intermediate Care scope — EHS Primary Care scope does NOT include Salbutamol administration. Assist patient to use her own Salbutamol MDI via spacer if she is able to self-administer and clinically indicates benefit.
- 8. Reassess SpO2, RR, and respiratory distress every 5 minutes — maintain continuous monitoring.
- 9. Record full observations every 10 minutes (or 5 minutes if patient appears time critical).
- 10. Recognise time-critical indicators: SpO2 unable to be maintained at 88–92%, increasing GCS deterioration, severe respiratory distress, or inability to speak — escalate to Priority 1 transport with pre-notification of receiving facility.
- 11. Provide continuous reassurance to patient — anxiety worsens breathlessness.
- 12. Arrange transport to hospital. Request ambulance via State Operations Centre if not already dispatched.
- 13. Scenario ends on arrival of ambulance and IMISTAMBO handover.
- 14. Attention to hand hygiene will be given throughout the scenario.
Clinical references: Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) — Acute Exacerbation · Dyspnoea & Respiratory Distress · Oxygen Delivery · Pulse Oximetry · Primary Survey
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