Anaphylaxis incident report- answer check
Posted: Tue Jul 31, 2018 5:30 pm
Hi! I have to fill up an incident form for the following scenario.
"You are an Assistant Educator in a 3-5 year old room.
Today is Claire's birthday. Her father has brought in a cake to share with the children. After all the children have eaten their fruit and sung ‘Happy Birthday’ to Claire, a staff member gives all the children a piece of the cake. Samantha (aged 4 years) is sitting at the table eating the cake with other children and is enjoying the celebration when you suddenly remember that she is allergic to eggs and has had an anaphylaxis reaction before.
You observe some red welts developing on her face, her lips appear to be swelling and she seems to be having difficulty breathing.
Your centre has an emergency action plan in place for her, it includes administering an Epipen.
Your qualified staff member is out of the room however you remember your training of what to do in this situation and how to administer the Epipen to Sarah."
My answers as of now:
General activity at the time of incident/injury/trauma/illness:
Eating cake
Cause of injury/trauma:
Egg allergy
Circumstances surrounding any illness, including apparent symptom:
After eating cake, Samantha developed red welts on her face, her lips appeared to swell and seems to have difficulty breathing.
Details of action taken (including first aid, administration of medication etc):
An epipen was administered, emergency services was contacted along with Samantha's emergency contact.
Did emergency services attend?: Yes
Was medical attention sought from a registered practitioner / hospital?: No
If yes to either of the above, provide details:
Samantha was suffering from anaphylaxis so medication was administered and emergency services was called to have her transfered to the hospital for observation.
Have any steps been taken to prevent or minimise this type of incident in the
future?:
Would I have been right in administering epipen? Also have I missed anything in my answers and are there any suggestions for the last question as to steps to prevent the incident in the future? And am I wrong to answer no on the was medical attention sought from a registered prac / hospital as the pamphlets from ASCIA say they should go to hospital for 4 hour observation
"You are an Assistant Educator in a 3-5 year old room.
Today is Claire's birthday. Her father has brought in a cake to share with the children. After all the children have eaten their fruit and sung ‘Happy Birthday’ to Claire, a staff member gives all the children a piece of the cake. Samantha (aged 4 years) is sitting at the table eating the cake with other children and is enjoying the celebration when you suddenly remember that she is allergic to eggs and has had an anaphylaxis reaction before.
You observe some red welts developing on her face, her lips appear to be swelling and she seems to be having difficulty breathing.
Your centre has an emergency action plan in place for her, it includes administering an Epipen.
Your qualified staff member is out of the room however you remember your training of what to do in this situation and how to administer the Epipen to Sarah."
My answers as of now:
General activity at the time of incident/injury/trauma/illness:
Eating cake
Cause of injury/trauma:
Egg allergy
Circumstances surrounding any illness, including apparent symptom:
After eating cake, Samantha developed red welts on her face, her lips appeared to swell and seems to have difficulty breathing.
Details of action taken (including first aid, administration of medication etc):
An epipen was administered, emergency services was contacted along with Samantha's emergency contact.
Did emergency services attend?: Yes
Was medical attention sought from a registered practitioner / hospital?: No
If yes to either of the above, provide details:
Samantha was suffering from anaphylaxis so medication was administered and emergency services was called to have her transfered to the hospital for observation.
Have any steps been taken to prevent or minimise this type of incident in the
future?:
Would I have been right in administering epipen? Also have I missed anything in my answers and are there any suggestions for the last question as to steps to prevent the incident in the future? And am I wrong to answer no on the was medical attention sought from a registered prac / hospital as the pamphlets from ASCIA say they should go to hospital for 4 hour observation