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Scenario โ€” Choking at community fair โ€” elderly male
Patient Information
Dispatch
A 75YO male has come to the FAP after a bystander reported him choking at the community fair food stall. (Harold Sutton)
Incident History
Pt was eating a sausage roll at a food stall when he began clutching at his throat and coughing. A bystander walked him to the FAP. He is conscious and distressed.
Emergency Contact
Margaret Sutton (Wife) 0412 883 741
Response
Alert
Airway
Partially obstructed. Pt is coughing but cough is becoming increasingly ineffective. Mild stridor audible on inspiration. No visible foreign body in oropharynx.
Breathing
Laboured. RR elevated with accessory muscle use. Pt unable to speak in full sentences โ€” mouthing words between coughing attempts. Mild cyanosis noted around lips.
Circulation
Radial pulse present, rapid and strong. Skin flushed. No external bleeding.
Disability
GCS 14 (E4V4M6). Orientated to time, place and person. Visibly anxious and panicking.
Exposure
Nil rashes or injuries noted. No medic alert jewellery. Food debris visible on shirt.
Vitals
Time SpO2 Resp Dist RR Pulse BP CRT GCS PERL Temp BGL Pain
Initial 91% (RA) Moderate 24 102 138/88 <2s 14 4 4 ++ โ€“ โ€“ 3
10 mins 97% (O2 simple mask 6L) Nil 16 88 134/86 <2s 15 4 4 ++ โ€“ โ€“ 1
History Taking
Signs/Symptoms
Throat discomfort, sensation of something stuck. Coughing, mild stridor, difficulty speaking.
Onset
Sudden onset approximately 5 minutes ago while eating a sausage roll.
Pain
Mild discomfort in throat rated 3/10.
Quality
Sensation of a foreign body lodged in throat. Not painful as such โ€” more a feeling of obstruction.
Radiates
Nil
Severity
3/10
Allergies
NKDA
Medications
Ramipril 5mg daily, Atorvastatin 40mg nocte.
Pertinent History
Known hypertension and hypercholesterolaemia. No history of dysphagia or swallowing disorders. No prior choking episodes.
Last Oral Intake
Sausage roll approximately 5 minutes ago โ€” the precipitating event.
Treatment
Bystander encouraged pt to cough. No back blows or chest thrusts attempted prior to arrival at FAP.
Events Leading
Pt was eating at a community fair food stall and took a large bite of a sausage roll. He began choking and clutching his throat. A bystander recognised the signs and escorted him to the FAP.
Scenario Progression and Treatment Objectives

((If trainee does not continuously reassess the effectiveness of the patient's cough within the first 2 minutes, the patient's cough becomes silent and he can no longer speak โ€” obstruction progresses to severe/complete.))

((If trainee attempts a finger sweep, inform them the patient recoils and the obstruction worsens โ€” cue progression to severe obstruction.))

((If trainee performs back blows and chest thrusts correctly for severe obstruction, the foreign body dislodges after the 3rd cycle โ€” patient coughs up food debris and reports immediate relief.))

((If trainee does not call for backup or arrange Priority 1 transport when obstruction progresses to severe, prompt with: 'The patient is now unable to breathe โ€” what do you want to do next?'))

((If patient becomes unresponsive at any point and trainee does not commence CPR, patient ceases all spontaneous movement.))

This patient is suffering from a partial (mild) Foreign Body Airway Obstruction with risk of progression to severe/complete obstruction.

  • Don appropriate PPE โ€” gloves minimum; eye protection given potential for expelled material.
  • Ensure suction equipment is available and functional at the bedside throughout care.
  • Perform primary survey โ€” identify partial airway obstruction with effective but weakening cough.
  • Continuously reassure the patient โ€” keep him calm to preserve effective cough effort.
  • Encourage coughing โ€” allow patient to remain in a position of comfort (seated, leaning slightly forward).
  • Do NOT perform finger sweep โ€” risk of worsening obstruction and local trauma.
  • Monitor continuously for deterioration from mild/partial to severe/complete obstruction (loss of voice, silent cough, cyanosis worsening, decreasing conscious state).
  • Apply oxygen therapy โ€” simple face mask at 5โ€“8L/min targeting SpO2 94โ€“98%.
  • Obtain SAMPLE history including medications, allergies and events leading to presentation.
  • Record baseline observations: GCS, SpO2, RR, HR, BP, pain score.
  • IF obstruction progresses to severe/complete (patient unable to speak, silent/ineffective cough): Position patient so gravity assists โ€” lean forward if standing/seated.
  • Deliver up to 5 back blows firmly between the scapulae at 90ยฐ to the patient's back โ€” check for dislodgement after each blow.
  • IF obstruction not relieved after 5 back blows: Deliver up to 5 chest thrusts (sharper than CPR compressions) โ€” check for dislodgement after each thrust.
  • Continue alternating 5 back blows and 5 chest thrusts until obstruction dislodges or patient loses consciousness.
  • IF patient becomes unconscious: Position supine and commence CPR as per Cardiac Arrest CPG โ€” call for ambulance backup immediately.
  • Activate Priority 1 transport and pre-notify receiving facility if obstruction is severe or patient deteriorates.
  • Once obstruction clears: Reassess airway, breathing, circulation. Record post-event observations.
  • Advise patient to remain at FAP for ongoing monitoring โ€” elderly patients may experience delayed complications including aspiration.
  • Record full observations every 5โ€“10 minutes or as clinically indicated.
  • Scenario ends on arrival of ambulance and IMISTAMBO handover.
  • Attention to hand hygiene will be given throughout the scenario.

Clinical references: Choking (Foreign Body Airway Obstruction) ยท Foreign Body Airway Obstruction ยท Oxygen Delivery ยท Suction ยท Cardiac Arrest - Adult