8.2 Learning Assessment

  • Urgent and Emergency Care

    There is a difference between urgent care and emergency
    care and what is best to seek treatment.
    While the answer is not always simple, knowing the difference
    between urgent care and emergency care and where to seek
    treatment could save your life in an emergency(8.2 pg 6).The emergency department was designed to provide fast, life or-limb-saving care. Many people, however, use the ER as a
    place to receive urgent care without realizing it. (8.2 pg 7)
  • Medical Emergencies

    Persistent chest pain, especially if it radiates to your arm or jaw or is accompanied by sweating, vomiting or shortness of breath
    • Persistent shortness of breath or wheezing
    • Severe pain, particularly in the abdomen or starting halfway
    down the back
    • Loss of balance or fainting
    • Difficulty speaking, altered mental status or confusion
    Sudden, severe headache
    Sudden testicular pain and swelling
    Newborn baby with a fever
    Intestinal bleeding
    Falls with injury or while taking blood thinners
  • 9-1-1

    Sometimes driving yourself or a loved one to the emergency
    room won’t get you the medical care needed fast enough.
    “Many people are confused about when to call 911,” says Dr.
    Evans. “It’s better to be safe than sorry. If you are in doubt,
    please call 911. Do not drive if you are having severe chest
    pain or severe bleeding, if feel like you might faint or if your
    vision is impaired.”(8.2 pg 7)
  • Example

    One of my co-workers had to call 911 because at the pool at motel 6 a parent was not watching one of their kids and he had started to drown and he had passed out with the amount of water in his body, but good thing that our desk clerk had called 911 right away and she had knew CPR because that had saved the child's life, 911 had arrived immediately and they had taken care of the situation.