The Setting
You and three friends have been hiking 18-20 miles a day for three days in the desert Southwest. It’s been hard and hot as anticipated, but not scorching hot. You’ve found water every day. This afternoon you backpacked over a steep sun-drenched sandstone ridge and down into a cottonwood glade. One of your companions has been lagging behind and eventually stops and sits by the side of the trail. He looks pasty white and sweaty and says he feels awful. Your scene size-up is brief: no hazards, one patient who looks sick and sat down. You think about BSI but keep your limited glove supply in your first aid kit for now. The patient agrees to your assessment, has a sound airway, is breathing without distress, is dressed in only shorts and t-shirt, is obviously not bleeding, has a strong radial pulse, and is on dry ground in the shade on a nice warm day.
SOAP Report
Subjective/Story/Summary
The patient is a 24-year-old male who states he “feels lousy.” He has been backpacking long distances for three days in hot weather (highs in the low 90s F) and this afternoon became too weak to hike.
Objective
Position found: Patient sat down by the side of the trail. There is no mechanism for injury.
Patient Exam: No obvious injuries were found in a head-to-toe assessment. Patient is pale and sweating. Skin is not hot to the touch and the patient has a normal mental status.
Vital Signs
TIME 1300
LOR A+Ox4
HR 100, strong, regular
RR 18, easy and regular
SCTM pale, warm and moist
BP strong radial and pedal pulse
Pupils PERRL
T° not taken
History
Symptoms: Patient states he is dizzy, nauseous, and “feels lousy”
Allergies: None stated
Medications: Occasional ibuprofen at 400-600mg for muscle soreness, none today
Pertinent Hx: Patient denies any ongoing medical conditions.
Last in/out: Patient drank three liters of fluid so far today, ate breakfast and ongoing trail snacks, urinated a light yellow urine twice today, and stated this is normal on long hikes. He had a normal BM this morning. Denies recent diarrhea or vomiting.
Events: Patient has been hiking in hot dry weather for three days, 18-20 miles per day without problems. He has not fallen or suffered any injuries.
| Vital Signs | TIME | 1530 hrs – supine | 1540 hrs –supine | 1600 hrs – standing |
| LOR | A+Ox4 | A+Ox4 | A+Ox4 | |
| HR | 130, regular, weak | 100, regular, weak | 76, regular, strong | |
| RR | 24, regular, shallow. Initial gasping for air has resolved and breathing is now quiet and easy. | 18, regular, shallow | 14,regular, easy | |
| SCTM | pale, cool, clammy | pale, warm, clammy | pink, warm, dry | |
| BP | radial pulses present | radial pulses present | radial pulses present | |
| Pupils | PERRL | PERRL | PERRL | |
| T° | Not taken | Not taken | Not taken |
Stop...
What is your Assessment and Plan?
Take a few minutes to figure out your own assessment and make a plan.
Don’t cheat—no reading on without answering this first!
Assessment
Assessment
Possible spine injury; we have a mechanism as well as thoracic spine pain and tenderness.
The Plan
The Plan
Maintain spine immobilization: patient was log rolled onto a pad, we have an improvised cervical collar with a rolled up jacket and soft head blocks in place.
911 has been called and an ambulance is anticipated to arrive in 20 minutes.
Anticipated Problems
Anticipated Problems
If the ambulance does not arrive, we have to prepare patient for the night.
Comments
The Tale Continues
The Tale Continues
The ambulance arrived and the crew accepted your verbal and written SOAP note. They confirmed your findings of upper back and spine pain with good CSM x4 in an alert patient with stable vital signs that are within normal limits. They replaced your improvised collar with a commercial soft collar and with your assistance lifted (BEAM’ed) the patient onto their cot. They secured the patient with the cot straps and a set of head blocks, loaded him into the ambulance, and drove away. Anticipating that your friend would be immobilized with backboard, hard cervical collar, and head blocks you were taken aback by this care.
End of the Tale
| TIME | 6:45AM | 7:15AM | 8:00AM |
| LOC | AOX4 | AOX4 | AOX4 |
| HR | 84, strong, regular | 84, strong, regular | 84, strong, regular |
| RR | 16, regular, easy | 16, regular, easy | 16, regular, easy |
| SCTM | Pale, Warm, Dry | Pale, Warm, Dry | Pale, Warm, Dry |
| BP | not taken | not taken | not taken |
| Pupils | PERRL | PERRL | PERRL |
| Temp | 99°F oral | 99°F oral | 99°F oral |
Written By
Test Author 1
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, his deleniti concludaturque ei, aperiri salutandi adversarium sed ea. Est no audire abhorreant, his ex nibh omnes, mel nibh scribentur cu. Ex populo legimus consectetuer mea. Posse interesset cu cum, choro accusam ne vel, te eos tollit consetetur. Wisi voluptua detraxit sed ad.
Ei mel essent labitur dignissim, eum ut adhuc voluptaria. Putent corrumpit ne vel, ius ut appetere euripidis. At causae repudiare dignissim sea, pri alii regione eripuit no. At pri quod meliore facilisis. Cu prompta inimicus forensibus pri, at vis fugit assum, te noluisse persequeris per. Et vix rebum accumsan quaerendum. Dolorem comprehensam his ne, nam nobis nullam explicari ea.

Comments
Although the patient is reliable, sober, not distracted, and has good CSM x4 they also have spine pain and tenderness and based on these findings, there was no reason to perform a focused spine assessment.
After a decade-long anticipatory phase of questioning the need for and merits of the spine immobilization protocols that have been standard urban EMS practices since the early 1970’s (backboard, hard cervical collar, and head blocks for even the suspicion of a spine mechanism of injury) the last few years has seen dramatic and rapid spread of new protocols.
The incentive for changing practice standards is the absence of studies showing spinal immobilization prevents further injury and the presence of studies that show that our spinal immobilization practices are possibly causing harm. We worried for decades that movement of an injured the spine would worsen the condition. There is no data to support this fear. Paranoia and rigid immobilization are making way for careful handling and comfortable patient packaging. Language is changing from spine immobilization to spine protection.
The new approaches to spine care are evolving and vary among services. Over time they will probably settle into a new set of standards. Highlights of the changes are:
Less reliance on cervical collars:
Backboards are reverting to being the extrication tool that they were originally designed to be: