NAPLES, FLA. – Without a single life lost at area hospitals, the medical response to the Boston Marathon bombings was by all accounts remarkable. But what if police and other first-responders had tourniquets and were trained in their use?
As it was, advanced topical hemostatic agents and tourniquets were MIA in the field, forcing all but one prehospital tourniquet to be improvised, according to Massachusetts General Hospital trauma surgeon Lt. Col. David King, U. S. Army Reserve.
"It’s abundantly clear from the literature that improvised tourniquets almost never work," he said. "The fact that every soldier down range has one in his pocket and we couldn’t muster up more than one in the city of Boston is a shame and we need to rectify that."
In all, there were 66 limb injuries, with 29 patients having recognized limb exsanguination at the scene. Of the 27 tourniquets applied, 26 were improvised.
Failure to translate this important lesson from military experience meant that these homemade devices were most likely wildly ineffective and, in some cases, may have even exacerbated blood loss, he said. Surprisingly, there’s no formal protocol for tourniquet application or training paradigm in Massachusetts, such that exists in the Army’s prehospital Tactical Combat Casualty Care handbook.
"If you look across the paramedic medical guidelines, there is no protocol on the right, evidence-based way to put on a tourniquet or what the indications are for a tourniquet," Dr. King said at the annual scientific assembly of the Eastern Association for the Surgery of Trauma (EAST). "We don’t have it, and we need to" have it nationwide.
EAST is hoping to provide some guidance in this area with the development of practice management guidelines (PMG) for tourniquet use in extremity trauma. Dr. King, who heads this PMG committee, reported at the meeting that the guidelines, due out later this year, will emphasize that commercially made tourniquets should be available in the prehospital setting, improvised tourniquets rarely work and cannot be recommended; essentially all commercially made tourniquets are equieffective; and that nonmedical personnel can be trained to correctly apply a proper tourniquet.
The need for bleeding control equipment and training for the public has not gone unnoticed by other stakeholders and is the central focus of the newest statement from the Hartford Consensus, a collaborative group of trauma surgeons, law enforcement officers, and emergency responders led by the American College of Surgeons (J. Am. Coll. Surg. 2014;218:467-75).
In dissecting the medical response to the Boston bombings, much has been made of the fact that Boston is home to six Level 1 trauma centers, and that it was race day, a city holiday, 3 p.m., and low-yield devices were used. Dr. King, however, gave high praise to an unsung hero, the Boston EMS loading officer who managed most of the transport destination decisions and smartly distributed critical cases throughout the area’s hospitals.
All critical patients were evacuated within 1 hour, but some have argued this could have been accomplished more quickly were it not for a "stay-and-play" mentality in the medical tent. The after-action review suggests there probably were enough ambulances to do the job in 30 minutes, said Dr. King, who remarked that the only thing that matters in critical trauma cases is time to surgical hemorrhage control.
"This will remain a controversial issue for Boston, whether staying and playing in the medical tent was a good idea," he said. "I don’t know what the right answer is."
Credit was also given to Massachusetts General, and many of the other city hospitals, for their insistence on regular full-scale drills that allowed quick lock-down of the facility to control access and manage the surge capacity in the emergency department.
"It’s more than just a tabletop exercise," Dr. King said. "When we test the surge capacity, we actually empty the emergency room for real. Usually, it occurs between 5:00 and 7:00 or 4:30 and 7:30 in the morning, but actually doing these things was useful, because when it came time to do it for real, no one was tripping over their own feet."
ED volume on that April afternoon was reduced from 97 patients to just 39 within 1.5 hours. Nontrauma physicians, including psychiatrists, did their part by writing "barebones orders" to get patients transferred to the wards.
Staff at Massachusetts General treated 43 patients, performing nine emergent operations, six amputations, two laparotomies, and one thoracotomy, with two traumatic arrests within the first 72 hours. As with other Boston hospitals, there were no in-hospital deaths, he said.