Case Study: Juan A. — Level 1 Trauma Nurse

CASE STUDYTRAUMA NURSELEVEL 1 TRAUMA CENTER
REAL USERS. REAL ENVIRONMENTS. REAL RESULTS.

Case Study: Juan A.
Level 1 Trauma Center Nurse

ROLERN — Emergency & Trauma Surgery
ENVIRONMENTLevel 1 Regional Trauma Center
EXPERIENCE8+ Years Acute Trauma Care
ONE SHEAR® TOOLOriginal V2 Black + Kydex Holster
USE VOLUME8–15 Trauma Activations / Shift
PROTOCOLTCCC MARCH Primary Assessment
THE BOTTOM LINE

Juan works in a high-acuity trauma bay handling penetrating trauma, blunt force injuries, and burn trauma. Institutional shears failed him constantly — binding on heavy fabric, dulling after 3–4 calls, loosening through autoclave cycles. ONE SHEAR® changed his workflow completely. He now recommends it to every colleague who walks through the trauma bay.

The Problem: Institutional Shears Fail Under Load

For years Juan used the standard hospital-issue shears — bulk-purchased stainless steel pairs that looked fine on paper. In a Level 1 trauma bay handling 8–15 activations per shift, they failed predictably and repeatedly.

The 4 Failure Modes

  • Binding on heavy fabric — Carhartt jackets, motorcycle leathers, multiple layers required multiple repositioning passes. TCCC Primary Survey starts with exposure. Every second of delay pushes hemorrhage control backward.
  • Edge rollover under load — Heavy denim, leather, and seatbelt material dulled institutional blades by call 3–4. Hospital shears are built for gauze, not emergency clothing removal.
  • Pivot loosening — Repeated autoclave cycles at 121°C + 15 psi would loosen the center bolt. Loose pivot = blades separating under load. No bite, no cut.
  • Contamination accumulation — Blood, saline, and tissue caked around the pivot. Dried material caused sticking mid-cut in sterile fields.
TCCC CONTEXT

MARCH Primary Survey: Massive hemorrhage control → Airway → Respiration → Circulation → Hypothermia. Exposure is step one. You cannot control a bleed you cannot see. Every second of delayed exposure is delayed hemorrhage control.

The ONE SHEAR® Advantage

DLC Coating — 9/10 Mohs

The ONE SHEAR® uses Diamond-Like Carbon coating at 9/10 Mohs hardness vs. titanium-coated shears at ~6/10. Result: 2× abrasion resistance, edge sharpness maintained through 40+ autoclave cycles, and a lower friction coefficient (~0.1) that prevents blade sticking on dried blood or fabric.

A dull blade in trauma doesn’t just slow exposure — it increases risk of lateral slippage and accidental patient laceration when redirecting mid-cut under stress.

Angled Lower Blade Geometry

The patented angled lower blade rides flat against skin and fabric. Juan can slide the shear under clothing without lifting the blade — eliminating the repositioning required with standard shears on layered patients. The blunt tip prevents puncture wounds during rapid cutting when a patient is hypotensive.

Built-In O₂ Wrench

The integrated oxygen wrench eliminates a second tool on Juan’s belt. Patients require rapid O₂ delivery every shift. ONE SHEAR® handles both clothing removal and valve management without a secondary tool.

Autoclavable Design

ONE SHEAR® handles are rated for hospital autoclave cycles. Minimal pivot sealing surfaces mean dried blood and saline don’t accumulate where they hide with standard shears. After each cycle: no smell, no contamination, no degradation.

Real Scenario: GSW Penetrating Chest Trauma

00:00
EMS wheels in 23-year-old, GSW right chest wall. GCS 14, SpO₂ 89%, BP 98/64, HR 118. Trauma activation. 2 minutes to imaging or surgical intervention.
00:15
Juan draws ONE SHEAR® from Kydex holster — one-handed, single motion. Cuts through heavy canvas work jacket and undershirt in one smooth pass. No repositioning. No binding. Exposure complete in 8 seconds. Standard shears on heavy canvas: 3+ passes, 20–25 seconds.
00:45
Vitals deteriorating. Wound near anterior axillary line. Juan cuts away undershirt to expose injury zone. Angled blade slides under fabric without lifting — no risk of secondary laceration on a hypotensive patient near decompensation.
01:00
Patient stabilized. Supplemental oxygen, chest X-ray ordered. Juan rinses ONE SHEAR® and places in sterilization tray. Zero contaminated crevices. Clean in one step.
TIME SAVINGS AT SCALE

15–20 seconds saved per trauma activation. Across 10+ activations per 12-hour shift, Juan recovers 20–30 minutes of aggregate assessment time per shift — time that translates directly to more accurate triage, earlier hemorrhage control, and better patient outcomes.

ONE SHEAR V2 Pro Black
ONE SHEAR® V2 Pro — Black
The shear Juan uses every shift. DLC-coated, autoclavable, sharp through 40+ sterilization cycles. Built for clinical environments.
From $34.99
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Performance Comparison

Metric Institutional Shears ONE SHEAR® V2
Edge sharpness (autoclave cycles) Dulls after 15–20 cycles Sharp through 40+ cycles
Heavy fabric (canvas, leather) 3+ passes, frequent binding Single pass, no binding
Pivot integrity Loosens after ~2 months Tight after 6+ months
Contamination accumulation Significant in pivot seams Minimal — cleans completely
Exposure time (heavy clothing) 20–25 seconds 8–10 seconds
Annual replacement Every 3–4 months 12+ months ongoing

What Juan Said

“I work in a level 1 trauma center so they see a lot of action. I recommend them to any health care worker, EMS, or firefighter.”

— JUAN A., RN — LEVEL 1 TRAUMA CENTER

After his first week with ONE SHEAR®, Juan recommended it to three colleagues. Within two weeks, two of them had ordered their own. Within a month, the trauma bay had a waiting list.

ONE SHEAR Tier 1 Elite

The Tool Juan Trusts Every Shift

DLC-coated blades. Autoclavable handles. Built-in O₂ wrench. 5-year warranty. Built for clinical environments, not just sold into them.

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