I had the priviledge of being asked to teach STCW Medical First Aid to a room full of delegates from within the Superyacht sector at UKSA recently. They were an excellent bunch of delegates and we really enjoyed the week together.
Obviously, we ensure that all STCW competencies are met and exceeded and we spend plenty of time honing the skills and building confidence, but no course is a good course without some story telling and this particular course were good enough to allow me to share their stories of injury. There are 10 stories, 1 from each delegate. Read on to find out what happened...
1. Whilst swimming in tropical waters, a fish bit a man on the ankle. It was excrutiating and he quickly requested assistance to get out of the water and back onboard. On examination the fish had managed to bite through the mans achilles tendon! Ouchy!!
2. This chap was taking a motorcycle taxi ride to get back onboard and a dog ran out in front of the motorcycel taxi. The chap fell off and dislocated his knee. Having dislocated my own knee, I feel his pain on this one!
3. There was a stweradess who may have imbibed a few too many alcoholic beverages one evening and when she came back to the yacht and attempted to get back onboard she fell and sustained an open fracture to her wrist. The only way the crw onboard could keep her calm was to sing to her. Not a tool that I have in my toolkit, anyone hearing my singing is usualy left with tinnitus!
4. Whilst out fishing with his Dad, one of the delegates managed to lose the tip off his thumb and a finger. Despite the throbbing pain and the bleeding, he was kept onboard until the fishing trip was complete.
5. One of the delegates shared a story of bouncing on a trampoline with his mate, ended up headbutting each other by accident and he lost 2 front teeth. Sadly, trampoline accidents are not uncommon with broken ankles and head/neck injuries being the most commonly sustained injuries reported.
6. Earlier on his career, this particular delegate was working on a Crew Transfer Vessel and the weather was a bit rough with big seas. A aprticularly large wave hit the side of the CTV and caused him to fall across the crew mess and put his head through the microwave oven.
7. This story came from a delegates childhood and to be honest, I did laugh out loud because I just couldn't quite believe it had happened. When he was a little boy he was cutting grass in the back garden of his home using childrens safety scissors and managed to snip one of his fingers off! I mean, really?? How did that even happen???
8. One gentleman was partaking in a few beers and when suitably inebriated managed to find himself taking part in an arm wrestling competition where he promptly had his wrist snapped. Ouch! Now whilst a fractured wrist isn't necesarily life threatening, the fact that he was drunk wouldn't have been ideal if there was any bleeding as alcohol can affect the way our bodies form clots.
9. Now I find that the Superyacht crew like to look after themselves and generally speaking try and keep fit as much as possible. This one particular delegate had taken a day off the yacht to go mountain biking and ended up going over the handle bars and needed stitches. Other common injuries sustained from that mechanism of injury are fractured collar bones, fractured ribs and fractured scaphoids.
10. When out for a swim one day, this delegate was wearing a loose cotton t-shirt to protect his shoulders and back from the sun. A crocodile appeared and went to take a bite out of this mans body. Obviously, terrified, he swam to shore immediately and got out very quickly only to find that the crocodile had managed to take a bite out of his T-Shirt which was billowing out when he was swimming! That was a seriously lucky escape.
So, having been doing this job for quite sometime, I understand how some of these injuries can sound complex or scary but the whole point of the STCW Medical First Aid is to drill into people the algorythym that we follow, regardless of what has happened and if they can get that squared away then nothing becomes impossible to deal with. Outcomes may differ, depending on the severity but how we approach a casualty and assess them does not change and then we teat what we find with whatever we have to hand at that moment in time.