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Published on British Equine Veterinary Association (http://www.beva.org.uk)

DISASTER MEDICINE: RESCUE AND EMERGENCY MEDICINE TRAINING FOR EQUINE VETS

18/03/2008 - 09:03
19/03/2008 - 06:03
Etc/GMT+1
JOINT BEVA & HAMPSHIRE FRS COURSE
*A further two dates will be added if there is sufficient demand. Dates will be publicised on the BEVA website and in the BEVA newsletter
Venue: Lyndhurst Fire Station, New Forest, Hampshire
Course Organisers: Josh Slater & Jim Green
Fee: £350 for BEVA Members, £415 for Non-Members
COURSE LIMITED TO 15 DELEGATES
Description:

This course is designed to provide rescue and emergency training to enable delegates to work effectively with the Emergency Services in equine rescue and to provide emergency care of rescued horses. This is a new course for 2008 and is provided through the partnership between BEVA and Hampshire Fire and Rescue Service (FRS). Following harrowing reports of unacceptable delays in horses being rescued and receiving appropriate care following road traffic and other incidents, BEVA, the BHS and Hampshire FRS have worked together to produce the Emergency Services Protocol [0] which was launched in May 2007. The Protocol contains a national directory of equine practices, organised geographically, that can be contacted by the emergency services in the event of an incident involving horses where veterinary attention is required. This course is suitable for all veterinary surgeons who work with horses, especially those from practices in the Protocol’s directory.

Day One of the course, led by Hampshire FRS, covers rescue techniques and is a mixture of seminars and hands-on practical sessions where delegates will learn rescue techniques using a life-sized anatomical horse manikin in simulated, but life-like, rescue situations. Day Two is led by equine clinicians who are skilled in emergency medicine and is a mixture of seminars, case-based discussion and hands-on practical sessions designed to cover the practical aspects of veterinary care in emergency situations. We hope that having attended this course, the prospect of attending a road traffic accident, or other rescue incident, will no longer be your worst nightmare.
Course Objectives: Having attended this course delegates will:

• Feel confident to respond to and participate in equine rescues
• Understand the role of the veterinary surgeon when attending equine rescue incidents and how the veterinary surgeon interacts with the Fire and Rescue Service and other emergency services
• Understand the techniques used by the Fire and Rescue Service to rescue horses involved in road accidents and other incidents including getting stuck in rivers, ditches,
cattle grids etc
• Be able to work safely and effectively to assist the FRS in equine rescue, including provision of appropriate sedation, analgesia or anaesthesia
• Be able to deal with the emergency medical and surgical care of horses that have been rescued.

Suitable for RCVS Module: Many potential modular certificate implications:
Equine general medicine; neuromuscular, behaviour and special senses;
C-E 6 Lameness (a).
Speakers: Watch Manager Jim Green Hampshire FRS
  Watch Manager Anton Phillips Hampshire FRS
  Dr Willem Back DVM PhD DipECVS DiplRNVA Utrecht
  Mr Justin Perkins BVetMed MSc Cert ES (Soft Tissue) Dip ECVS MRCVS North Mymms
  Miss Imogen Johns BVSc DipECVIM MRCVS North Mymms
Programme:    
Day One: 18th March 2008 Rescue Techniques
09.00 Registration and coffee  
09.30 Seminars and problem solving:
• Rescue scenarios: problem solving and decision making (small group discussion)
• Incident Command System: how the emergency services work at incidents, the role of the vet at incidents and the relationship between the emergency services and vets (seminar)
• Safe working at incidents: safety and danger zones, safety procedures, personal protective equipment for working safely at incidents (seminar)
• Rescue techniques: planning rescues, methods of rescue including use of strops, mud lance, restraining hobbles, lifting slings, rescue glides (seminar)
 
12.30 Lunch  
13.30 Practical Sessions (delegates will work with Hampshire FRS Officers and conduct simulated rescues using a life-size anatomically correct horse manikin):
• Manual and mechanical skidding techniques
• Lifting for rescue on medical suspension
• Use of the Cornwall Mud Lance
• Rescue Glide
• Rescue paths
• Trailer righting
• 'A' frame lifting
 
17.00 Rescue scenarios: problem solving and decision-making (small group discussion), questions and
answers, summing up of key points for Day One.
 
17.30 End of day one Evening Course dinne  
Day Two: 19th March 2008 Emergency Medicine and Surgery  
09.00 Coffee  
09.30

Seminars and problem solving:

  1. The non-weight bearing horse
    a) Approach to non-weight bearing lameness following trauma
    b) Assessment, decision making, stabilisation, transport
  2. Wounds: lacerations and punctures
    a) Assessment, initial management and referral
    b) Dressing and complications
    c) Synovial sepsis
    d) Body cavity punctures
  3. Head Trauma
    a) Potential consequences, initial assessment and management, prognostic indicators, complications
  4. Eye trauma
    a) Assessment, management, prognosis
    b) When to refe
 
12.00 Case-based workshop session  
13.00 Lunch  
14.00 Practical Sessions:
• Splint application
• Head radiology
 
15.00

Seminars and problem solving

  1. The recumbent horse
    a) Assessment, differential diagnosis, decision making
    b) Spinal trauma
  2. Shock
    a) Causes, assessment and immediate therapy
    b) Hypothermia
    c) Management of hypovolaemia and use of different fluids
  3. Sepsis and septicaemia
    a) Assessment, management and decision making
 
16.30 Case-based workshop session  
17.30 End of course  

Source URL:
http://www.beva.org.uk/node/321