Wednesday, November 19th, 2008 09:13 pm
So, one of my students had a "petit mal" epileptic seizure today during Peer Editing. Hardly anyone, except me and the members of her editing group, even noticed, which is extremely surreal. She came to a stop - she was just... stopped, and I went up and said, " *student* are you okay?" and she quite obviously wasn't, so I was thinking "oh, gee, what shall I do???" and I just touched her and spoke to her and apparently that was the right thing to do because she came out of it and said she was okay... But it made me think "fuck - what do I do if there was a genuine emergency?" Of course, nowadays you can depend on one of your students having a cell phone (in fact, I have a cell phone in the bag I have with me), but even so - what would you do??
Thursday, November 20th, 2008 05:31 am (UTC)
Oh my god, that's terrifying! If she started having a full-on seizure, I'd probably go into what I call "COP DAD CRISIS MODE" in which I would be like BAM get her something to bite on, get me a phone, make sure she doesn't hit anything, etc. and then afterwards have a shaking, panic attack. Do you know if she has had seizures before?
Thursday, November 20th, 2008 05:32 am (UTC)
Depends on how bad it is.

If that's all, just wait it out. If it's a serious one, call or have someone call 911, and look for a medic-alert bracelet or necklace.
Thursday, November 20th, 2008 06:37 am (UTC)
911 if there isn't an established emergency procedure in place, much drilled. (I not only want them safe, I don't want to be sued.)
Thursday, November 20th, 2008 02:20 pm (UTC)
I'd curse myself for not having taken more first aid and not keeping my CPR up to date -- *reminds self*

and then I'd ask if there were any EMTs in class (we have lots of volunteer fire departments here), get them down to keep an eye on things, and call 911. And after that, call public safety.

I think we are technically supposed to call the health center on campus, now that I think about it. And they have an EMT. So I might call them first.

Thursday, November 20th, 2008 08:22 pm (UTC)
Cell phones are a great thing. For seizures, clear the area (so the person can't slam into something and injure him/herself), if they are on the ground cushion the head from slamming into the floor/ground. Otherwise just wait it out. If they are really out of it afterwards, call for medical attention...most of the time they just need rest, rehydration and electrolytes (Gatorade, orange juice, grape juice). You might want to ask the student what she prefers you to do if it happens again as different people have different types of seizures and different ways of recovering. It's a shock when it happens unexpectedly, but not typically an "emergency" unless it doesn't resolve itself in a few minutes.
Thursday, November 20th, 2008 11:18 pm (UTC)
Helpfulness is a double-edged sword.

An older man blacked out and fell onto the sidewalk on the other side of the street as I was walking home. There was another man there who helped him to stand and brought him over to a bench to sit down.

Being the dork I am, I have a first aid kit in my backpack, so I dodged across the street to see if I could help. I talked to the man giving the assistance, who turned out to be a ski patrol dude, and let him take some band-aids for the older bloke's scraped hand.

At that point, an entire wave of first-aid attendants, nurses, nurses-in-training, dabblers, dentist assistants, and Starbucks workers rushed over to give their textbook 2 cents. Poor old chap was pounced on with a dozen simultaneous questions of medical history, accident description etc. If his brain wasn't completely backed-out before, it certainly would be now.

I put my cool dude first aid kit back together and scooted out of there. Did my part. Ski patrol man had the scene.

It's usually pretty easy dealing with the direct emergency. The toughest part is dealing with everybody else. Speaking from a few summers doing first aid work, there's my textbook two.