Guide to Do Surg
Basically the main guide to do surg is this:
- Heart stop = Highest priority. If the patient’s heart has stopped, use a defibrillator immediately. You have 2 turns to shock your patient or it dies.
- Bleeding = Second Highest Priority. Use stitches to reduce bleeding. Bleeding happens at different rates and when your patient is losing blood very quickly, it can die in a couple turns. As such, You can also use clamps instead of stitches if you have at least 1 incision (and it’s not a patient with tough skin) to reduce bleeding without closing the incision (if you do decide to close the incisions all the way, all bleeding will stop)
- Temperature = Third Highest Priority. If the patient’s temperature is in the red, this means you should use antibiotics ASAP. Temperature will get to red at different rates so it’s really important you identify how fast the temperature is increasing (just like bleeding).
- Anesthetic = Fourth Highest Priority. This is the last “important” thing you really need to focus on at all times during a surgery. If your patient is awake while they have incisions, they will flail around which requires sponges to clean up. They will also start bleeding very quickly which will kill your patient in a few turns.
General Formula for Surg
- Ultrasound => Identifies problem except in the case of flus (how many times you need to scalpel, if you have to fix bones, etc.)
- Lab Kit => Allows antibiotics to be used to lower temperature and identifies flus (for flus all you need to do is spam antibiotics)
Use those first and from there, check the priority list and deal with the symptoms one by one.
Note: Your patient may have shattered/broken bones. Broken bones can be fixed using splints. Shattered bones will become broken bones if a pin is used while you have an incision in your patient (assuming they’re not a superhero).
Tip: You can click “fix it” at the very end of the surgery (when all symptoms are treated and patient is stitched up). This makes surgs easier.
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