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RAVINES: A Practical Approach to PFC

The RAVINES Mnemonic was created to help the medical provider on the ground in an austere environment with a very sick patient. Most medics will do a decent TCCC SMARCH survey and when they get to the end of that, get vital signs to begin trending and repeat the MARCH sequence while adding E-PAWS-B

At some point the provider may run out of things to do or could get lost in the immensity of the work which needs done. This is a great place for a therapeutic pause to gather oneself and think of what could be done while moving on to a secondary or detailed exam from which to make a problem list and care plan. This will help keep the thought process moving in the right direction and in an appropriate order while serving as a reminder of some critical steps that we have identified such as reducing tourniquets to pressure dressings and making a telemedicine/evac call along with others that may be overlooked such as nursing care and environmental considerations. Mnemonics should be just cheesy enough but memorable in any situation so remember this; RAVINES or deep draws are places that a small unit would hide a patrol base while in enemy territory to rest and prepare for the next leg of the mission. Just as draws and RAVINES offer relative piece of mind in a dire situation, so too should this memory aid:

MARCHE your PAWS to the RAVINES…

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Did you forget anything?

Did we?


SMARCH-E-PAWS-B-RAVINES

-Shoot back

-Massive Bleeding

-Airway

-Respirations

-Circulation

-Head Injury & Hypothermia

-Eye Injuries

-Pain Control and Sedation, Drugs

This is usually a good point in which to pause get baseline vitals and complete a thorough secondary, head-to-toe exam and make a comprehensive problem list. From the problem list you can then start to make a prioritized care plan.

-Antibiotics/Antimicrobials

-Wounds

-Splints

-Burns

-Resuscitation and Reduce Tourniquets

-Airway care

-Ventilations and Oxygenation

-Initiate Early Telemedical Consult

-Nursing Care

-Environmental Considerations

-Surgical Procedures


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