The optimal method of prehospital insulation and rewarming of hypothermic patients have been subject of debate, and there is a substantial lack og high-quality evidence to guide providers. One question concerns whether or not the patients clothing should be removed prior to being wrapped in an insulating model with a vapor barrier. Evaporative heat loss is one of four mechanisms of heat loss, and preventing evaporative heat loss should be a prioritized task for providers. Removal of wet clothing usually means subjecting the patient to the environment, but will reduce the evaporative heat loss considerably. An other alternative is to encapsulate the patient in a vapor barrier. Evaporative heat loss will stop when the humidity inside the vapor barrier reaches 100%. We aim to investigate whether it is recommended to removed wet clothing or encase the patient in a vapor barrier.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
8
The participants in the intervention group will have their clothing removed prior to insulation.
Haukeland University Hospital
Bergen, Norway
Mean skin temperature
Change in mean skin temperature during rewarming phase
Time frame: 60 minutes
Subjective thermal comfort and shivering
Using a validated questionnaire at regular intervals
Time frame: 60 minutes
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