((If trainee allows or encourages Liam to walk or stand at any point โ father states Liam looks pale and suddenly says his eyes feel heavy and he feels dizzy. GCS drops to 13.))
((If Pressure Immobilisation Technique is NOT applied within 5 minutes of assessment โ Liam begins to complain of tingling spreading up his right calf toward the knee at the 8-minute mark.))
((If trainee attempts to wash, incise, or suck the bite site โ facilitator reminds trainee this is contraindicated per CPG and prompts them to reconsider their management.))
((If trainee fails to splint the limb after applying PIT bandage โ father asks 'shouldn't we stop him moving his leg somehow?' as Liam continues to bend his knee.))
((If trainee does not call for ambulance transport early โ at 12 minutes Liam develops mild ptosis and says 'my eyelids feel heavy'. Escalate to Priority 1 transport with pre-notification.))
This patient is suffering from a suspected venomous snakebite to the right medial ankle with no current signs of systemic envenomation.
- Ensure scene safety โ confirm snake is no longer present in the FAP or immediate area before proceeding.
- Don appropriate PPE โ gloves minimum.
- Perform Primary Survey โ airway patent, breathing adequate, circulation intact, GCS 15.
- Instruct Liam to stop walking immediately and assist him to sit or lie down โ DO NOT allow the patient to walk or stand.
- Perform Vital Sign Survey โ HR, RR, BP, SpO2, GCS, BGL, temperature, pain score.
- Expose right lower leg โ identify and document two puncture marks on right medial ankle, note location and appearance.
- Apply Pressure Immobilisation Technique (PIT) to the right lower limb as per clinical skill โ commence at the toes/foot and bandage firmly upward covering as much of the limb as possible, ensuring 1.5cm x 1.5cm square indicator on snakebite bandage.
- Mark the bite site on the PIT bandage with a marker pen.
- Apply a splint to the right lower limb to further minimise movement.
- Keep Liam calm and still โ continuously reassure patient and father throughout.
- Do NOT wash, cut, incise, suck, or apply an artery tourniquet to the bite site.
- Do NOT attempt to identify, trap, catch, or kill the snake.
- Do NOT remove PIT bandage or splint prior to arrival at hospital.
- Assess distal neurovascular observations of right foot โ capillary refill, colour, warmth, movement, sensation โ confirm arterial flow is maintained distal to PIT; if CRT exceeds 3 seconds, contact CSPSOC/ASMA before adjusting bandage.
- Activate ambulance transport โ all suspected snakebite patients require transport to hospital for assessment and observation. Contact State Operations Centre.
- Monitor patient persistently โ record full observations every 10 minutes, closely monitoring for respiratory depression, ptosis, weakness, drooling, slurred speech, or visual disturbances.
- If signs of envenomation develop (ptosis, weakness, respiratory depression, altered GCS): escalate to Priority 1 transport with pre-notification of receiving facility.
- Continue to monitor and reassure until ambulance arrival.
- Scenario ends on arrival of ambulance and IMISTAMBO handover.
- Attention to hand hygiene will be given throughout the scenario.
Clinical references: Snakebite ยท Pressure Immobilisation Technique (P.I.T) ยท Primary Survey ยท Pulse Oximetry ยท Blood Glucose Monitor ยท Blood Pressure ยท Fractures & Dislocations โ Splinting