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Scenario โ€” Hypothermia following prolonged cold water immersion
Patient Information
Dispatch
You are called to a patient (Rhys Connolly, 35YO male) at the Fremantle Triathlon Festival FAP. Bystanders report he exited the open water swim leg and collapsed near transition. He is conscious but confused and shivering violently.
Incident History
Pt completed the 1.5km open water swim in the Swan River on a cold winter morning. Water temperature estimated 14ยฐC. He exited the water approximately 10 minutes ago, did not change out of his wetsuit, and has been standing in the wind before collapsing at the transition zone. Event volunteers removed his wetsuit and wrapped him in a foil blanket.
Emergency Contact
Kate Connolly (Wife) 0412 874 503
Response
Voice
Airway
Patent. Nil airway obstruction. Nil stridor or vomitus.
Breathing
Breathing present. Shallow with decreased rate. No wheeze or crackles. Shivering noted.
Circulation
Weak radial pulse. Skin pale, cold and moist. Peripheral cyanosis to fingertips. CRT 4 seconds.
Disability
GCS 12 (E3V4M5). Confused and disoriented to time and place. Slurred speech. Ataxia noted โ€” unable to stand without support.
Exposure
Wet swimming attire only. Skin pale and mottled peripherally. No visible traumatic injury. Core area feels cool to touch despite foil blanket applied.
Vitals
Time SpO2 Resp Dist RR Pulse BP CRT GCS PERL Temp BGL Pain
Initial 91% (RA) Mild 10 52 94/60 4s 12 4 4 SL 33.1 3.6 mmol/L 2
10 mins 96% (O2 NRB 15L) Nil 13 60 102/66 3s 14 4 4 ++ 33.5 4.2 mmol/L 1
History Taking
Signs/Symptoms
Confusion, slurred speech, shivering, weakness, ataxia. Peripheral cyanosis. Feeling very cold.
Onset
Symptoms began approximately 5โ€“10 minutes after exiting the water. Progressively worsening confusion noted by fellow competitors.
Pain
Mild generalised muscle aching. No chest pain. No head pain.
Quality
Diffuse muscular discomfort from sustained shivering.
Radiates
Nil
Severity
2/10
Allergies
Nil known
Medications
Nil regular medications
Pertinent History
Fit and healthy. Regular triathlete. No known cardiac or neurological history. Trained in pool swimming but less experienced with open water cold exposure. No prior episodes of hypothermia.
Last Oral Intake
Banana and water approximately 1 hour prior to swim start.
Treatment
Wetsuit removed by event volunteers. Foil emergency blanket applied. No medications administered.
Events Leading
Completed the open water swim leg of the triathlon in the Swan River. Water was notably cold. Exited the water, felt immediately weak and confused, stood at the transition area for several minutes in the wind before collapsing.
Scenario Progression and Treatment Objectives

((If wet clothing is not removed promptly and the patient is not actively covered with blankets, tympanic temperature drops to 32.4ยฐC at 10 minutes and patient becomes increasingly bradycardic at 46 bpm โ€” inform trainees the patient is deteriorating.))

((If patient is allowed to stand or is assisted to walk โ€” e.g. to move to the FAP โ€” trigger a sudden collapse. Remind trainees that sudden motion can trigger ventricular arrhythmia in moderate hypothermia.))

((If BGL of 3.6 mmol/L is not actioned: at 10 minutes, patient develops increased confusion and GCS drops to 10 โ€” prompt trainees to reassess BGL and consider Glucose Oral Gel.))

((If oxygen is not applied within 5 minutes, SpO2 drops to 88% on RA and respiratory rate slows to 8 โ€” prompt trainees to consider assisted ventilation.))

This patient is suffering from mild-to-moderate hypothermia (core temperature 33.1ยฐC) following prolonged cold water immersion during the swim leg of a triathlon, complicated by wind exposure post-exit and delayed passive warming.

  • Ensure scene safety โ€” assess environment for cold wind exposure and move patient to a sheltered area or inside FAP.
  • Don appropriate PPE โ€” gloves at minimum, given wet environment.
  • Perform Primary Survey โ€” confirm patent airway, assess breathing rate and adequacy, assess circulation including central pulse.
  • Position patient recumbent โ€” do not allow patient to stand or walk due to risk of triggering ventricular arrhythmia.
  • Remove remaining wet clothing โ€” cut or assist removal of wet swimwear promptly.
  • Apply oxygen via Non-Rebreather Mask (NRB) at 10โ€“15 L/min โ€” titrate SpO2 to 94โ€“98%.
  • Passively re-warm โ€” wrap patient in blankets and activate Ready-Heat blanket if available. Place sticker-side down toward body, cover with standard blanket. Do NOT place directly on bare skin.
  • Perform Vital Signs Survey โ€” GCS, SpO2, RR, BP, pulse, CRT, tympanic temperature, BGL.
  • BGL is 3.6 mmol/L โ€” patient is symptomatic (confused, GCS 12) and BGL is below 4.0 mmol/L. GCS is NOT 15/15 therefore oral glucose drink is NOT indicated at this time. Monitor BGL closely and reassess GCS every 5 minutes.
  • (If GCS improves to 15 and BGL remains below 4.0 mmol/L: Administer Glucose Oral Gel 15g orally โ€” entire contents of tube โ€” as per Hypoglycaemia CPG. Reassess BGL after 10 minutes. Encourage complex carbohydrate once recovered.)
  • Reassure patient continuously โ€” explain all procedures calmly.
  • Record full vital signs observations every 10 minutes โ€” monitor temperature trend, GCS, and BGL.
  • Avoid sudden patient movement โ€” handle gently to minimise risk of precipitating arrhythmia.
  • Request ambulance response โ€” this patient is time critical given altered GCS, bradycardia, and tympanic temperature below 34ยฐC.
  • Scenario ends on arrival of ambulance and IMISTAMBO handover.
  • Attention to hand hygiene will be given throughout the scenario.

Clinical references: Hypothermia ยท Hypoglycaemia ยท Oxygen Delivery ยท Blood Glucose Monitor ยท Ready Heat Blanket ยท Primary Survey ยท Glucose Oral Gel