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ScenarioLab
St John WA — Event Health Services

Scenario — Deep burn with suspected inhalation injury at community bonfire event

advanced Trauma · Adult · 35yr · male

Patient Information

Dispatch You are called to a 35YO male at the Australia Day community bonfire event at Langley Park. Bystanders report he was standing too close when the bonfire flared unexpectedly — his arms and chest are burned and he is coughing.
Patient Marcus Holt — 35yr (80kg)
Incident History Pt was attending the Australia Day bonfire event at Langley Park when a petrol-accelerated bonfire flared suddenly. He sustained burns to his anterior chest and both forearms. Bystanders pulled him back. He is conscious and walking but coughing persistently and his voice sounds hoarse.
Emergency Contact Sarah Holt (Wife) — 0412 774 309

Initial Rapid Assessment

Response Alert
Airway Patent on arrival but hoarse voice noted. Singed nasal hairs and eyebrows visible. Soot visible around nostrils and mouth. No audible stridor at rest — HIGH RISK for progressive airway oedema.
Breathing Persistent cough present. Laboured — accessory muscle use visible. RR elevated. SpO2 91% on room air. No audible wheeze at this time.
Circulation Radial pulse rapid and strong. Skin on forearms — partial-thickness burns (red, blistered, wet appearance) and areas of full-thickness burn (pale/waxy, dry, no sensation reported by patient). Anterior chest — partial-thickness burns across upper chest approximately 9% TBSA.
Disability GCS 15 (E4V5M6). Orientated to time, place and person. Anxious and distressed. Complaining of significant pain to forearms; describes no pain at full-thickness areas.
Exposure Anterior chest upper segment burned — approximately 9% TBSA (Rule of 9s). Both forearms burned — approximately 9% TBSA combined (front of each forearm). Total estimated TBSA ≈ 18%. Mix of partial-thickness (blistered, red) and full-thickness (pale/waxy/dry, no sensation). Clothing partially melted to chest area — DO NOT REMOVE. Singed eyebrows and nasal hair confirmed.

Vitals

History Taking

Scenario Progression and Treatment Objectives

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