- It can be difficult to tell whether an injury is a fracture, dislocation, ! sprain or strain. If in doubt, always treat as a fracture.
- DO NOT try to force a broken or dislocated bone back into place. Signs and symptoms Fracture
pain or tenderness at or near the site of the injury
swelling
deformity
discolouration, redness, bruising
loss of function
the patient felt or heard the break occur
a coarse grating sound is heard or felt as bones rub together
Dislocation
pain at or near the site of the injury
difficulty or inability to move the joint
abnormal mobility of the limb
loss of power
deformity (such as an abnormal lump or depression)
tenderness
swelling
discolouration and bruising
What to do Fracture 1 Follow DRSABCD. 2 Ask the patient to remain as still as possible. 3 Control any bleeding, cover any wounds and check for other fractures. 4 Immobilise the broken bone by placing a padded splint along the injured limb. 5 Secure the splint by passing the bandages above and below the break to prevent movement. Tie the bandages firmly and away from the injured side. 6 For a leg fracture, also immobilise the foot and ankle. Support the limb while bandaging. 7 Check that the bandages are not too tight and watch for signs of loss of circulation to the limb every 15 minutes. 8 Seek medical aid. Dislocation 1 Follow DRSABCD. 2 Rest and support the limb using soft padding and bandages.
- For a shoulder injury, support the arm as comfortably as possible.
- For a wrist injury, support the wrist in a sling. 3 Apply a cold pack directly over the injured joint, if possible. 4 Seek medical aid. 5 Check circulation of the limb. If circulation is absent, call triple zero (000) for an ambulance. Massage the limb gently to try to restore circulation.
- public document at doc.anagora.org/english_fracture_and_dislocation
- video call at meet.jit.si/english_fracture_and_dislocation
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