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Funny Making Sure It's Broken Before The Mud Cast Put On

Quick! Someone get @Flatus Tube in here immediately to explain to us how fucked up this shit really is.

Reducing (putting into the right position) a fracture or dislocation is a brutal job at times. It sometimes takes 3 people holding and pulling to get it right. But we use pain relief and skill, using our hands to feel the position of the bone and check the blood flow and nerve sensation during and after the reduction.

This method is careless. Using a knee does not allow for any assessment of the position of the fracture. It also causes more soft tissue damage from blunt force trauma. The fat sweaty guy also puts the cast on much too tight.

There is always more swelling over the first 1-2 days and a tight cast leads to cutting of the blood flow. We use ‘back slabs’ as the initial cast where the plaster of Paris only goes around the back and sides, leaving a gap for swelling to evolve. A fibre glass cast is then applied in a couple of days that is left on for 4-6 weeks.
 
Reducing (putting into the right position) a fracture or dislocation is a brutal job at times. It sometimes takes 3 people holding and pulling to get it right. But we use pain relief and skill, using our hands to feel the position of the bone and check the blood flow and nerve sensation during and after the reduction.

This method is careless. Using a knee does not allow for any assessment of the position of the fracture. It also causes more soft tissue damage from blunt force trauma. The fat sweaty guy also puts the cast on much too tight.

There is always more swelling over the first 1-2 days and a tight cast leads to cutting of the blood flow. We use ‘back slabs’ as the initial cast where the plaster of Paris only goes around the back and sides, leaving a gap for swelling to evolve. A fibre glass cast is then applied in a couple of days that is left on for 4-6 weeks.
So what's the pea soup for and what good is it without the ham? After all, the ham is much higher on the leg, right?
:lulz:
 
Reducing (putting into the right position) a fracture or dislocation is a brutal job at times. It sometimes takes 3 people holding and pulling to get it right. But we use pain relief and skill, using our hands to feel the position of the bone and check the blood flow and nerve sensation during and after the reduction.

This method is careless. Using a knee does not allow for any assessment of the position of the fracture. It also causes more soft tissue damage from blunt force trauma. The fat sweaty guy also puts the cast on much too tight.

There is always more swelling over the first 1-2 days and a tight cast leads to cutting of the blood flow. We use ‘back slabs’ as the initial cast where the plaster of Paris only goes around the back and sides, leaving a gap for swelling to evolve. A fibre glass cast is then applied in a couple of days that is left on for 4-6 weeks.
That's all well and good but the guy just came in for a toothache.
 
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