Embracing the Use of Tourniquets to Save Lives:
By Ron Mason EMT-P
(29 April 2016)
The use of tourniquets by
professionals and lay persons alike are no longer considered as dangerous as
they were thought to be in the past. Using tourniquets in the combat field pre-hospital
setting by combat medics and Corpsmen has proven highly effective in saving
lives. However, because of the stigma
attached to them as being dangerous, the adoption of the tourniquets use in the
United States on the street in the pre-hospital setting by trained Emergency
Medical Technicians (EMT’s) and the lay persons is close to non-existent in its
use as a tool to save lives. After reviewing all of the supported evidence from
the field of battle, one can determine that it is imperative that the use of
tourniquets needs to become an accepted form of bleeding control.
For centuries, tourniquets have
been used in clinical settings to stop blood loss for minor and major surgeries
alike. This is the go-to equipment and solution for doctors. It is a trusted treatment
and remains uncontested in its ability to save lives. Shortly after World War II (DeGregory, 2007), tourniquets
fell out of favor in both, street medicine and the combat setting. Using a
tourniquet was commonly believed to cause limb loss and tissue damage beyond
repair. The major oversight in this conclusion was simply this; stopping large amount
of blood from leaving the body as quickly as possible saves lives and increases
long-term patient prognosis. Somewhere along the way, the old adage “life over
limb” was misplaced in hasty need to not have the person bleeding profusely
from a bullet wound, traumatic amputation or other puncture wound. There is an
aphorism in the medical world that states, “Eventually all bleeding stops”
(Benjamin, 2016).
According to an article by
BoundTree University (2011), tourniquets swiftly disappeared from the history
books until the eighteenth
century where the instrument resembling today’s devices, appeared. In “1718,
Louis Petit, a French surgeon, developed the screw device derived from the
French verb "tourner" (to turn), he named the device
"tourniquet" (McEwin, n.d) as
it is commonly known today. Subsequently, throughout modern times, the device
has gone in and out of favor as professionals debate over the risks they pose
to the victim. According to DeGregory’s (2007) article, “they had been shunned
by the military since the end of World War II” (p. 16, 2007).
Shortly after a battle in Somalia, the military looked
into reevaluating the use of tourniquets (Efficacy of Prehospital Application of Tourniquets, 2008). As depicted in the
movie, “BlackHawk Down” (Sony, 2001),
without the means of an extraction, several soldiers, died in combat that day from
bleeding to death. When the fighting ended, the military commissioned an investigation
and looked at what they could do to resolve treatable combat battle field
deaths. The two major items they purposed were; a new tactical care doctrine
and the use of tourniquets on the battle field. Shortly afterwards, the
military adopted the civilian version of Pre-hospital Trauma Life Support
(PHTLS) and adjusted it to a more combat friendly version called Tactical
Combat Casualty Care (Journal of Emergency Medicine, 2013), (Efficacy of Prehospital Application of Tourniquets, 2008).
While the military was instrumental
in the fallout of tourniquet usage, they now lead the charge of reviving the
use of tourniquets, in the United States. However they have been met with
resistance and have been slow to catch on with pre-hospital workers, and even
slower with law enforcement and firefighters. That is currently changing but at
a slower rate than it should be.
Additionally, tourniquets are still
not endorsed or instructed to the civilian population on a wide scale;
civilians continue to be taught with literature that is a decade behind. In an
article by Barret, he quotes [Dr.] Pons, "It's kind of a radical change in
thinking, because for years we have been teaching that tourniquets should be
the absolute last resort,” (WSJ, 2013). Quite the opposite is true: placing the
tourniquet on as soon as possible has shown amazing results in both combat
operations and traumatic exsanguination (massive or complete blood loss) here
in the United States. The average adult can fully exsanguinate in less than
five minutes and irreversible damage happens in less than three minutes (WSJ,
2013) with 30% blood loss and at this time, the United States military medical
community, based on the recent wars and data shown in this paper, has more
experience and data on the effects and positives outcomes of the tourniquet
than any fighting force in history. No service person is shipped off to war
without proper training, an individual first aid kit and a tourniquet.
Traumatic death is the number one
killer of all Americans in the age range of birth to 46 years of age and is the
number three killer of people of all ages in the United States. (National
Trauma Institute, 2014). Each year
trauma counts for over 190,000 people dying and takes 30% of all life years
lost (National Trauma Institute, 2014). Roughly 3% or 5700 of these deaths are
from traumatic amputation (NHTSA, 2014), 13,286 are from gunshot deaths in 2015
(BBC, 2015), and 475 died from mass shootings (BBC, 2015). Obviously,
proficiency with a device to stop bleeding immediately and allow medical
personnel to get patients to the hospital is in great need on the streets of
America. Why do we have such resistance from the civilian medical world and
first responders in implementing the use of the tourniquet to civilians in our
country?
The number one concern is that
tourniquets cause the loss of limbs or nerve damage to those who have had a
tourniquet applied to a limb that suffered damage. In a 2007 study conducted by
a combat support hospital in Iraq by the military, 499 patients received 862
tourniquets in the field on 651 limbs (Journal of Emergency Medicine, 2011).
Survival rate of 87% was documented for those who had the tourniquet applied.
If the tourniquet was applied prior to onset of shock, the survival rate was
96% (Journal of Emergency Medicine, 2011). Only .4% had limb shortening, four
patients total had transient nerve issues at the application site of the
tourniquet, and zero amputations resulted solely from using the tourniquet
(Annals of Surgery, 2009). The study concluded lifesaving benefits and low
risk, while stopping the bleeding and preventing the patient from going into
shock (Journal of Emergency Medicine, 2011).
There are many statistics and
studies showing that tourniquets are not the hindrance in providing life and
limb saving medical care and are considered the norm as detailed throughout
this paper. Why is there still push back on using this life saving device? In
all probability, it stems from a lack of information communicated to EMS
providers, doctors who are not current in available information and governing
agencies who place protocols for Emergency Medical Technicians to practice.
Another reason it is often overlooked stems from the pre-Iraq war days.
Tourniquets used in the field were
not consistent across the board; training was negligible, tourniquets were too thin
and inadequate to sufficiently stop bleeding and inflicted massive tissue damage. Today, new materials and advancing
technology have enabled the average person to be swift and proficient in applying
the modern commercially available devices. Additionally, training and education
is available via the internet. One can
find expert advice, information, and training videos.
Hunt said the White House-led group is working to develop
a public service campaign that will have the sticking power of successful
initiatives such as "Stop, Drop and Roll" or "See Something, Say
Something." (p.16, 2014). "We need to get it right. We have a real
opportunity to prevent deaths," Hunt said. (p. 18, 2014). Even after the
Boston Marathon bombing, the Red Cross’ position was “Only trained people
should use them and only as a last resort” (Lloyd, 2013). As of October 2015,
the American Heart Association after all its push back has finally conceded
that tourniquets can and should be used after initially trying to stop bleeding
with direct pressure. (Red Cross and Heart Association Announce Updated
Guidelines, 2014).
The need to give first responders the ability to save
lives in the field is crucial. Why is there still continued push back on using
this life saving device? Change is needed and there must be willingness for the
public and doctors in the trauma centers to accept and learn the lessons of the
past. The general public is extremely capable of using these simple devices,
and the distance to the hospitals is more than adequate within the studied time
constraints to help rather than hurt individuals who have the need to have a
tourniquet applied.
References
Benjamin, A. (2013, April 16). Events force BAA to alter course at Marathon. Boston Globe. Retrieved from http://www.bostonglobe.com/sports/2013/04/15/baa-alters-boston-marathon-after-blasts/KNAF53rH44yECYwrGpD25L/story.html
Burke, P., Kalish, J., Feldman, J., Agawal, S., Glantz, A., Serino, R., & Herish, E. (2008, July 31). The Return of Tourniquets: Original research evaluates the effectiveness of prehospital tourniquets for civilian penetrating extremity injuries. Journal of Emergency Medicine. http://www.jems.com/articles/print/volume-33/issue-8/patient-care/return-tourniquets-original-re.html
Center Disease Control. (2014, February). Trauma Statistics . In National Trauma Institute . Retrieved April 20, 2016, from http://www.nationaltraumainstitute.org/home/trauma_statistics.html
Dwyer, D. (2016, January 9). Tourniquets, now carried by Boston police, weren’t always standard. Boston.com. Retrieved from http://www.boston.com/news/untagged/2016/01/09/tourniquets-now-carried-by-boston-police-werent-always-standard
Guns in the US: The statistics behind the violence. [Online Exclusive] (2016, January 5). BBC.com. Retrieved from http://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-34996604
Kime, P. (2014, August 20). Army doctor promotes use of tourniquets. Army Times. Retrieved from http://www.militarytimes.com/story/military/2014/08/20/army-doctor-promotes-use-of-tourniquets/14333319/
Kragh, J., Littrel, M., Jones, J., Walters, T., Baer, D., Wade, C., & Holcumb, J. (2011, December). Battle Casualty Survival with Emergency Tourniquet Use to Stop Limb Bleeding. Journal of Emergency Medicine, 590-597. http://www.jem-journal.com/article/S0736-4679(09)00638-6/fulltext
Kragh, J., Walters, T., Baer, D., Fox, C., Salinas, J., & Holcumb, J. (2009, January). Survival with emergency tourniquet use to stop bleeding in major limb trauma. Annals of Surgery. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19106667
Kragh, J., Walters, T. J., Westmorland, T., Miller, R. M., Marby, R. L., Kotwal, R., & Ritter, B. A. (n.d.). Tragedy Into Drama: An American History of Tourniquet Use in the Current War (3rd ed., Vol. 13). N.p.: Journal of Special Operations Medicine. (Original work published 2013) http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24048983
Lloyd, J. (20113, April 18). Emergency tourniquets, war lessons saved lives in Boston. USA Today. Retrieved from http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2013/04/17/tourniquets-emergency-boston/2091079/
McEwin, J. (n.d.). Tourniquet overview. In Tourniquet.org. Retrieved April 7, 2016, from http://www.tourniquets.org/tourniquet_overview.php
Red Cross and Heart Association Announce Updated Guidelines. (2015, October 15). In American Red Cross. Retrieved April 26, 2016, from http://www.redcross.org/news/press-release/Red-Cross-and-Heart-Association-Announce-Updated-Guidelines
Scott, R. (Director). (2001). Black Hawk Down [Online video]. Sony. Retrieved from http://www.sonypictures.com/movies/blackhawkdown/
Snyder, D., Tsou, A., & Schoelles, K. (2008, July 31). Efficacy of Prehospital Application of Tourniquets and Hemostatic Dressings to Control Traumatic External Hemorrhage. . In National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. Retrieved May, 2014, from file:///C:/Users/Owner/Downloads/811999b-TraumaHemostasisEvidenceReport.pdf
Tourniquets: From combat to commonplace. (2011). In Boundtree University. Retrieved from http://www.boundtreeuniversity.com/Trauma/articles/1001716-Tourniquets-From-combat-to-commonplace
Authored by Ronald Mason EMT-P (Please direct all question and comments to rmason92@gmail.com)
and a special big thanks to my editor Alison Swanson
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