Man treated for allergic reaction after insect sting


A man suffered an allergic reaction after an insect sting. Care assistants helped him use an EpiPen and medical responders gave him medication. His condition improved after treatment.
Audio|Source: Douglas County Public Safety
00:57
Transcript:
00:00Went in the house just have two PCAs that come to visit a couple times a week.00:05They have to be at the house with him.00:08About 20, 25 minutes after the initial thing, it sounds like he was becoming semi-responsive, was able to tell a PCA where his Epi pen was and they did administer Epi.00:29Fairly responsive, vitals were all within normal limits, a little bit tacky, fight a stack on the monitor, 93% on road here, 128 over 675 for a pressure, both of 116, did just get the one dose of Bessi.00:44They thought they'd given him a second one, but it happened to be just a trainer.00:48They did give him 50 milligrams of Benadryl ID upon our arrival, and we'll see you guys in just about to winter.
00:00
Went in the house just have two PCAs that come to visit a couple times a week.
00:05
They have to be at the house with him.
00:08
About 20, 25 minutes after the initial thing, it sounds like he was becoming semi-responsive, was able to tell a PCA where his Epi pen was and they did administer Epi.
00:29
Fairly responsive, vitals were all within normal limits, a little bit tacky, fight a stack on the monitor, 93% on road here, 128 over 675 for a pressure, both of 116, did just get the one dose of Bessi.
00:44
They thought they'd given him a second one, but it happened to be just a trainer.
00:48
They did give him 50 milligrams of Benadryl ID upon our arrival, and we'll see you guys in just about to winter.
Disclaimer:
This was transcribed by AI and may contain errors. Please verify the information independently.
Location mentioned:
Douglas County, MN
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