((If BGL is not assessed โ patient's presentation deteriorates slightly and she becomes more drowsy; prompt trainee: 'You notice her eyes are getting heavier. What other assessment do you want to perform?'))
((If trainee does not place patient in lateral position when GCS drops or patient becomes drowsy โ patient begins to vomit; prompt trainee: 'She suddenly vomits. What do you do now?'))
((If trainee does not reassess regularly โ patient's GCS dips to 11 at 8 minutes; prompt trainee: 'Her friend says she seems sleepier than before.'))
((If trainee attempts to leave patient alone at any point โ bystander advises 'she's trying to stand up and walk away.'))
This patient is suffering from acute alcohol intoxication presenting with reduced GCS, slurred speech, confusion, and unsteady gait following excessive alcohol consumption at a community festival.
- Ensure scene safety โ festival environment, assess for hazards, crowd control, bystanders.
- Don appropriate PPE โ gloves minimum, consider eye protection given vomiting risk.
- Perform Primary Survey โ confirm patent airway, adequate breathing, circulation, GCS 12.
- Perform BGL assessment โ confirm 4.8 mmol/L, rule out hypoglycaemia as contributing cause of altered GCS.
- Position patient safely โ seated upright initially; if GCS deteriorates further or patient becomes drowsy, place in lateral position to protect airway.
- Apply pulse oximetry monitoring โ confirm SpO2 96% on room air.
- Perform full Vital Signs Survey โ HR, BP, RR, SpO2, GCS, BGL, temperature.
- Take IMISTAMBO-style history from patient and bystanders โ confirm alcohol only, no other substances, no trauma, no medical history.
- Do NOT administer oxygen unless SpO2 falls below 94% โ patient is currently maintaining adequate saturations on room air.
- Monitor patient closely โ repeat observations every 10 minutes, document GCS trend.
- Ensure patient is not left alone โ continuous observation given reduced GCS and aspiration risk.
- Do NOT allow patient to walk unassisted given unsteady gait and reduced conscious state.
- Reassess airway continuously โ particularly if GCS declines; prepare suction equipment.
- Consider escalation โ if GCS continues to decline, SpO2 drops, or patient cannot be roused, request ambulance backup via State Operations Centre.
- Scenario ends on arrival of ambulance and IMISTAMBO handover.
- Attention to hand hygiene will be given throughout the scenario.
Clinical references: Unconsciousness ยท Disturbed & Abnormal Behaviour ยท Hypoglycaemia ยท Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) ยท Blood Glucose Monitor ยท Lateral Position ยท Primary Survey ยท Pulse Oximetry