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Scenario โ€” Snakebite โ€” Paediatric male at community event
Patient Information
Dispatch
You are called to a patient (Liam Nguyen, 8-year-old male) at the Whiteman Park Community Fair FAP. Bystanders say he was playing in the grass near the picnic area and is now crying and holding his lower leg.
Incident History
Pt was running through long grass near the oval boundary when he felt a sharp sting on his lower right leg. A bystander saw what appeared to be a snake in the grass. Pt walked to the FAP with his father approximately 5 minutes ago.
Emergency Contact
Thanh Nguyen (Father) 0412 783 456
Response
Alert
Airway
Patent. No airway obstruction, no stridor, no swelling.
Breathing
Spontaneous. Rate 22/min. No increased work of breathing. No wheeze.
Circulation
Radial pulse present, regular, normal rate. Skin warm. Two small puncture marks visible on right medial ankle โ€” minimal redness, no significant swelling. No external bleeding.
Disability
GCS 15 (E4V5M6). Orientated to time, place and person. Anxious but co-operative.
Exposure
Two small puncture marks approximately 8mm apart on right medial ankle. Mild redness localised to bite site. No urticaria, no angioedema.
Vitals
Time SpO2 Resp Dist RR Pulse BP CRT GCS PERL Temp BGL Pain
Initial 99% (RA) Nil 22 108 102/68 <2s 15 4 4 ++ 36.8 5.4 mmol/L 4
10 mins 99% (RA) Nil 20 102 104/70 <2s 15 4 4 ++ 36.8 5.4 mmol/L 3
History Taking
Signs/Symptoms
Pain and mild redness at right medial ankle bite site. Mild headache developing. Feeling anxious. No weakness, no visual changes, no drooling, no difficulty swallowing or speaking.
Onset
Approximately 10โ€“15 minutes ago while running through long grass near the oval boundary.
Pain
Localised pain at right medial ankle bite site.
Quality
Sharp initial sting, now a dull ache at site.
Radiates
Nil radiation of pain.
Severity
4/10
Allergies
Nil known drug allergies.
Medications
Nil regular medications.
Pertinent History
Fit and well. No significant past medical history. Father confirms Liam walked to the FAP โ€” approximately 20 metres from where he was bitten.
Last Oral Intake
Ate a sausage sizzle and drank water approximately 45 minutes ago.
Treatment
Father applied firm pressure with a cloth to the bite site for approximately 2 minutes prior to walking to FAP. No bandage applied.
Events Leading
Pt was running barefoot through long grass at the boundary of the oval during the community fair when he felt a sudden sharp pain in his right ankle. A bystander reported seeing a brown snake moving away in the grass.
Scenario Progression and Treatment Objectives

((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