| A | B |
| Optimum limit of time between the moment of injury and surgery at the hsopital | Golden hour |
| Quick assessment of the head, neck, chest, abdomen, pelvis, extremities, and posterior of the body to detect signs and symptoms of injury | Rapid trauma assessment |
| Cooperation of crew members, each knowing their role and working together to manage the serious patient | Teamwork |
| Patient with more than one serious injury | Multiple-trauma patient |
| Action or forces that may have caused or contributed to the injury | Mechanism of injury |
| Swelling caused by a collection of blood under the skin or in damaged tissues as a result of an injured or broken blood vessel | Hematoma |
| Inability of the body to adequately circulate blood to the body's cells to supply them with oxygen and nutrients | Hypoperfusion |
| A procedure designed to move a patient in a hurry when the situation of safety warrants it | Emergency move |
| Patient with a fractured right leg and a crushed pelvis is called a _______ patient | multiple trauma |
| When a patient has an obvious angulated forearm and is unresponsive, what is the priority? | the airway |
| At what point is the mulitple-trauma patient most likely stabilized? | in the surgical suite |
| The three "Ts" involved in the management of a multiple-trauma patient are timing, transport, and | teamwork |
| A resonable goal for scene time when dealing with a critical trauma patient is _______ minutes. | 10 |
| When a trauma patient is making gurgling sounds as he breathes, what should you do? | suction the airway |
| Sometimes a ________ can act as a full-body splint when the critical patient must be immobilized quickly | long backboard |