deaddadsclub: (life is good)
Cristina Yang ([personal profile] deaddadsclub) wrote in [community profile] fandomhigh2018-09-12 12:31 am
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Humanoid Health and First Aid, Wednesday, Period 1

The students would arrive for class today to find their teacher bent over a tablet in an actual simulation (of a classroom, look, there was still a learning curve here), tapping at various things and chuckling ominously to herself. Someone — probably a squirrel — had finally clued Cristina in on what the Danger Shop was for.

"Oh man. Chief Webber would love this."

She looked up once they'd gathered, then tapped a few last buttons on the tablet and set it aside. "So the squirrels haven't reported on any suspicious deaths around town, so I'm going to assume none of you had to use what we learned last week yet. Lucky you. Today you're going to learn something you're way more likely to actually use in your day to day lives: how to treat a hemorrhage." She tapped a button on her tablet, and the classroom's whiteboard lit up, showing the diagram of the human circulatory system. "This is what your blood is supposed to do. Anything that involves blood moving out of your circulatory system is what's called a hemorrhage. Or bleeding. This can happen internally or externally, and no matter where and why it happens, it'll kill you if it happens too much. Fortunately, your body really likes keeping its blood where it's meant to be, so it already has a system in place to keep from losing too much of it: clotting. Basically, the escaping blood cells bond together to create a plug for the wound to keep anything else from leaking out. Sometimes it needs a little help, though, and that's where you all come in."

Cristina pressed another button and a basic list replaced the diagram. "Most of the time, someone bleeding isn't going to be an emergency. You gut yourself while shaving or get a papercut or a nosebleed, and it hurts a lot, but you're not going to die. You can wash it out and bandage it up yourself and move on with your life. Sometimes, though, you're going to want to the person doing the bleeding to the hospital — or in this case, the clinic. I suggest you write that top list there down. You come into my clinic expecting me to bandage a basic cut that's stopped bleeding on its own, and we're going to have words.

"So, even if you're calling 911 and seeking professional help, you're still going to want to keep as much blood in your patient as possible along the way. Here's how to do that: apply pressure. A lot of it. Continuously. Get a clean towel or gauze or whatever clean, absorbent material you have handy — that includes your own clothes, unless you've been rolling around in the mud or you have bad hygiene or something — and press it down over the wound until the bleeding stops. Usually this should just take a couple minutes, unless the wound is severe, or if the person has a clotting deficiency for any reason. If possible, elevate the wound above the level of the person's heart. That means raise their arm in the air if they cut their elbow or hand, or lay them down and elevate their leg if the wound is there. Blood is a liquid, which means it's subject to gravity. It's not going to want to travel up to get out of the person's body. Then try to keep the person as calm and still as possible until the bleeding stops or further help arrives. Their heart rate speeds up, and so will their bleeding.

"If those two techniques don't work and you are not going to be able to find an actual doctor or emergency tech any time soon, then there are a few other things you can do to save someone. These are for use in absolute emergencies only, as they'll probably result in nasty scarring at best.

"If the blood is coming out of the wound in spurts, that means you have an arterial bleed on your hands. That means that blood coming or going directly to the person's heart is exiting their body, and at high speed. Arterial bleeds can result in death in a matter of minutes, so you have to work quickly. You should still use the above techniques, holding pressure and elevating the injury, but you'll also want to place pressure against the artery itself." She called up another chart. "There are points on your body where the arteries come closer to the skin, called pressure points. If you press down on the nearest one of these closer to the victim's heart than the wound, you can slow down the bleeding and give them a better chance of making it to the hospital. This works on the same principal as a tourniquet, only with slightly less risk of the person losing whatever part of the body you've cut off the circulation to. In general, cutting off someone's circulation is a really bad idea. Only use it in absolute emergencies.

"If you're stuck somewhere for an indefinite amount of time without access to medical assistance, and you can't get someone's bleeding to stop, you're going to need to break out the big guns. A tourniquet in that situation is basically guaranteeing the victim's going to lose a limb, but if you have, say, a sewing kit on you, you can keep them alive and in one piece with only a little gentle maiming." She hit another button on her tablet, this time calling up instructions on suturing. "This is what the doctors will be doing once the victim gets to a hospital, just in a much cleaner, friendlier environment. We're professionals and can minimize scarring. You are not, and the person you're stitching will probably wear a reminder of that fact for life. Still, it can be quite a satisfying way to pass the time. Like knitting." And really, who didn't like knitting? "If you don't have sewing supplies — or even, say, a fish hook and some line — superglue can also be used in a pinch, or even staples or safety pins. In some situations, it's really going to come down to using whatever you have on hand to close that wound.

"And then there's cauterization. That hurts a lot, and you end up with all sorts of other complications from the burns, but it can be quite effective in its own way. Still, you're high school students, not movie action heroes. Don't try to cauterize your wounds."

She pushed one more button, this time calling up a new age website. "Here's a list of things people think can be used to stop bleeding. I don't recommend any of these, but the list itself is kind of hilarious. Very 'don't try these at home', despite them literally advising them as home remedies." She shook her head. "But people will believe anything if it's said on the internet."

She turned back to the class, who had hopefully been madly jotting all of that down. "So rather than practice on more dummies today — or try stitching up some bananas, even though that is a tried and true method of learning to suture — we're going to actually use this room to its full, high tech potential. Students, meet your patients." She pressed a series of buttons, and six new people appeared in the room. They just a handful of random preprogrammed characters she'd pulled up from the menu, and included a punk rocker, a ten year old, a police officer, a sexy zombie nurse, a pirate, and a rodeo clown. All of whom promptly started bleeding from various wounds. "Now keep them alive."
always_someone: (Layout - Alone)

Re: Sign in

[personal profile] always_someone 2018-09-12 09:21 am (UTC)(link)
Norman Babcock
white_oleander: (sleeping beauty)

Re: Sign in

[personal profile] white_oleander 2018-09-12 12:07 pm (UTC)(link)
Astrid Magnussen
revengenotebook: (Default)

Re: Sign in

[personal profile] revengenotebook 2018-09-13 12:48 am (UTC)(link)
Paris Geller
always_someone: (Srs)

Re: Listen to the lecture

[personal profile] always_someone 2018-09-12 09:25 am (UTC)(link)
Norman was once again taking notes, yes, and once again doodling his little visual aids as he went. They still were more 'funcional rectangle people' than anything resembling fine art, but at least they did have the functional part going for them.
seriesofbaddecisions: (ehhh)

Re: Listen to the lecture

[personal profile] seriesofbaddecisions 2018-09-12 11:33 am (UTC)(link)
Sabine was taking detailed notes, right up to the point where the activity was announced. Really, she probably should have expected this.
hourtohour_notetonote: (Default)

Re: Listen to the lecture

[personal profile] hourtohour_notetonote 2018-09-12 12:58 pm (UTC)(link)
This was... graphic, but educational, which, honestly, was pretty much what Simon was expecting at this point.

He was a little curious about how the room had been rearranged, but it was kind of cool.
white_oleander: (listening)

Re: Listen to the lecture

[personal profile] white_oleander 2018-09-12 06:16 pm (UTC)(link)
Astrid was...not a note-taker, but she very quickly became engaged. At first, she was expecting her eyes to start glazing over at any moment, but Dr. Yang presented the information in such a clear and concise way that she was drawn in and any effort to dismiss it as something she could never grasp faded away. She could do something like this, it was pretty basic, really, and maybe, if she could remember it all and one day use it, she could work toward balancing the karmic scales. Save a few lives to make up for the one you didn't stop from being ended.

She didn't take notes, no, but not so long into the lecture, there were at least a few sketches. Drawing it would definitely help it stick in her brain a little better.

And she may have scribbled down the homeopathic stuff, too, because, so help her, they may be useless, but she agreed that they were pretty amusing (and she could probably go back and recall a few times some of them were used by her own mother, too).
revengenotebook: (wooooow)

Re: Listen to the lecture

[personal profile] revengenotebook 2018-09-13 12:50 am (UTC)(link)
Paris was taking copious notes so she could cross-reference them against her own research.
seriesofbaddecisions: (in shadow)

Re: Stop the bleeding!

[personal profile] seriesofbaddecisions 2018-09-12 01:48 pm (UTC)(link)
Sabine picked the rodeo clown, because it seemed like a challenge without involving a bullet, since she had no experience with those at all. She'd listened well and was being very careful in her work, checking the hoof print areas too, even if she suggested that the clown might want to find a new line of work.
white_oleander: (black bow)

Re: Stop the bleeding!

[personal profile] white_oleander 2018-09-12 06:57 pm (UTC)(link)
SO, thinking about it and having it all ordered in her head was one thing. But when the time actually came to do something about it, Astrid started to doubt everything she'd just learned.

It's not real, Astrid, she had to remind herself. It's just the danger shop. If she messed it up, there were absolutely no consequences.

Well, except disappointment, damage to her pride, and a severe feeling of guilt deep in her stomach that she couldn't even save fake people.

So guess who was going for the ten-year-old kid. Because at least she'd been that ten-year-old kid and mostly had to take care of herself, so she could at least handle that one.

"Come on, let's get you all fixed up," she said, trying to smile as she went up to the kid to guide him toward a place to sit (another thing to freak out about: how could these seem so real? But they weren't, Astrid, just remember that). She gave him a towel and told him to tilt his head back and press here, showing him, and press hard, and then she knelt down to take care of cleaning and bandaging those knees.

"What even did you do?" she asked, mostly as a way to distract the...simulations (would she even need to do that? She would definitely do that with a real kid) while she worked, but also, she was actually a little curious, too.
mylandmyrules: (Smiling shy)

Re: Stop the bleeding!

[personal profile] mylandmyrules 2018-09-12 11:33 pm (UTC)(link)
Nell picked the person with the crazy hair and clothes. Once she'd gotten him to let go of his guitar she was able to sit him down, clean the wound, and then neatly sew up the cut on his arm. You might even think she'd done something like this before.
revengenotebook: (wooooow)

Re: Stop the bleeding!

[personal profile] revengenotebook 2018-09-13 12:51 am (UTC)(link)
Paris got the ten year old. Her bedside manner could really use some work.

"Oh, stop crying," she said, grabbing for gauze to staunch the wounds. "Snot everywhere is not going to help your bloody nose."