((If distal neurovascular observations โ capillary refill, colour, warmth, movement, sensation to toes โ are NOT assessed before splinting, the patient reports that the tingling in her foot has become numbness and her toes look pale. Prompt the trainee: 'What do you notice about her foot?'))
((If splinting is applied without padding of hollows and bony prominences, the patient reports increased discomfort at the ankle. Prompt the trainee: 'She says it feels very tight at her ankle โ what might you check?'))
((If distal neurovascular observations are NOT repeated after splinting, inform the trainee: 'Your assessor asks โ have you reassessed circulation, movement, and sensation distal to the splint?'))
((If the left shoe and sock are not removed or the limb is not exposed prior to assessment, prompt: 'You have not fully exposed the injury โ what else might you be missing?'))
((If jewellery โ there is an ankle bracelet on the left ankle โ is not removed before splinting and oedema increases, the patient winces and points to her ankle. Prompt: 'She is pointing to something on her ankle โ what do you notice?'))
This patient is suffering from a suspected mid-shaft left tibial fracture with distal neurovascular compromise (tingling to left foot).
- Don appropriate PPE including gloves.
- Perform Primary Survey โ confirm airway patent, breathing adequate, no life-threatening haemorrhage.
- Control any haemorrhage โ confirm skin is intact; apply direct pressure if open wound identified.
- Expose the injured limb โ carefully remove left running shoe and sock; note and remove ankle bracelet before oedema occurs.
- Assess distal neurovascular observations BEFORE splinting โ capillary refill time, skin colour, warmth, movement (ask patient to wiggle toes), and sensation (ask patient to describe feeling in toes) to left foot.
- Document baseline neurovascular findings โ CRT <2s, tingling present to left toes, movement intact.
- Perform Secondary/CNS Survey โ assess for any other injuries from the fall including wrists and hands.
- Pad natural hollows, deformities, and bony prominences (ankle, knee) with appropriate padding prior to splint application.
- Apply soft splint or rigid splint immobilising the joint above (knee) and below (ankle) the injury site using broad bandages โ maintain limb in position of comfort.
- Reassess distal neurovascular observations AFTER splinting โ CRT, colour, warmth, movement, and sensation to toes. Loosen bandages if compromise is found.
- Reassess and document pain score post-splinting โ target improvement from 8/10.
- Apply cold pack to injury site wrapped in a towel or bluey โ do not apply directly to skin.
- Elevate the injured limb where tolerated to reduce swelling.
- Apply pulse oximetry and monitor vital signs including heart rate and respiratory rate.
- Reassure patient continuously throughout โ explain each step before performing it.
- Record full observations every 10 minutes.
- Arrange transport to hospital via ambulance โ this injury requires imaging and Advanced Care level pain management beyond EHS scope.
- Document all findings including neurovascular assessment before and after splinting on patient care record.
- Scenario ends on arrival of ambulance and IMISTAMBO handover.
- Attention to hand hygiene will be given throughout the scenario.
Clinical references: Limb Trauma ยท Haemorrhage ยท Primary Survey ยท Secondary & CNS Survey ยท Pain Assessment ยท Fractures & Dislocations โ Splinting