Archive for July, 2008

Measuring Patient Temperatures

July 20th, 2008 by podmedic

digital_globe_sm.jpgThe June 2008 issue of the journal MEDSURG Nursing has the findings of a study on the variation of different methods of taking a patient’s temperature.  Read the summary article on it here at Medical News Today.

The gist of the story is that the study found significant variations in the different methods of taking a patient’s temperature.  Using a standard digital oral thermometer as a baseline and comparing it to tympanic, temporal, and disposable oral strips, the authors of the study found that the other methods varied widely in their readings when compared with the baseline.

The significance of this is that our tools are only part of the process we use to assess patients.  We also need to rely on our physical assessment skills and learn to judge the patient’s condition by our visual and physical findings as well as by the many monitoring devices we have at our disposal.

It takes me back to one of the first things I learned as a paramedic student years ago — Treat the patient and not the monitor.  If your monitor shows a febrile patient but that patient shows no other signs or symptoms of a fever, you need to get another thermometer and check again.

Category: on the side | No Comments »

Multiple Sclerosis and Episode 35

July 18th, 2008 by producer

Welcome to Episode 35

ProMedNetwork.comThe Nursing Show is a proud member of the ProMed Podcast Network.

podcastdownload.jpg Right Click to download (Macs Option Click)

itunesnew.jpg Subscribe with iTunes here (must have iTunes installed — it’s free)

RSS Feed to subscribe (copy url to Juice, Zune Marketplace, or your favorite podcatcher)

Click the arrow to play the Nursing Show

A podcast for Nurses, Nursing Students, and others interested in what it takes to be a Nurse

—————————-

Sponsors rnscc72.gifrnons72.gifrncc72.gifrn72.gif

Get 10% off Pepid’s portable nursing solutions

Nursing Show Listener Deals –

Save 50% off first month of Blockbuster Total Access (visit MyMovieSavings.com)

———————————–

Link of the Week:  Emergency Nursing Today blog and Podcast

———————————–

News

Doctors Who Bully Nurses Threaten Patient Safety

Hospital bug vaccines predicted

Home Care Remote Monitoring And Communication Device Gets FDA Approval

———————————–

Tip of the Week — Multiple Sclerosis Review

NIH Links Page

NIH MS Tutorial

NINDS Page

National MS Society Page

———————————–

Don’t miss an episode! Get the Nursing Show Newsletter by email. Fill out the email form in the right hand column of the site. Get it now!

Comment or share ideas here on the comment link below or by email:

Comment@NursingShow.com

PodcasterNews, customize your newscast!

Other Podcasts from Jamie Davis:

Contact Me!

————————————————

Music from The Podsafe Music Network

“Wasting My Time” by Matthew Ebel
Visit Matthew Ebel here — Let him know you heard it on the MedicCast

Or you can click on the link below to go right to iTunes to check out his music!

Matthew Ebel - Beer & Coffee - Wasting My Time
Click here to check out other Songs from the MedicCast Network Podcasts at the iTunes Store.

————————————-
Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.

Category: podcasts | 1 Comment »

Acetaminophen Overdoses and Episode 34

July 11th, 2008 by producer

Welcome to Episode 34

ProMedNetwork.comThe Nursing Show is a proud member of the ProMed Podcast Network.

podcastdownload.jpg Right Click to download (Macs Option Click)

itunesnew.jpg Subscribe with iTunes here (must have iTunes installed — it’s free)

RSS Feed to subscribe (copy url to Juice, Zune Marketplace, or your favorite podcatcher)

Click the arrow to play the Nursing Show

A podcast for Nurses, Nursing Students, and others interested in what it takes to be a Nurse

—————————-

Sponsors rnscc72.gifrnons72.gifrncc72.gifrn72.gif

Get 10% off Pepid’s portable nursing solutions

Nursing Show Listener Deals –

Save 50% off first month of Blockbuster Total Access (visit MyMovieSavings.com)

———————————–

News

Safe Staffing Legislation to Protect th Public

14 Babies Got Ovedose on Blood Thinner

Barcode Has Flaws

———————————–

Tip of the Week — Toxtidbit with Lisa Booze on Acetaminophen Overdose

NIH Medline on Acetaminophen Overdoses

eMedicine on Acetaminophen Toxicity

———————————–

Don’t miss an episode! Get the Nursing Show Newsletter by email. Fill out the email form in the right hand column of the site. Get it now!

Comment or share ideas here on the comment link below or by email:

Comment@NursingShow.com

PodcasterNews, customize your newscast!

Other Podcasts from Jamie Davis:

Contact Me!

————————————————

Great music by Johanna Stahley (website link) — I’m Not Perfect — (iTunes link)
Johanna Stahley - I'm Not Perfect

Click here to check out other Songs from the MedicCast Network Podcasts at the iTunes Store.

————————————-
Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.

Category: podcasts | No Comments »

Complementary Medicine Site

July 8th, 2008 by podmedic

digital_globe_sm.jpgRecently, I have received some requests for a review of complementary medicine practices and research and information on the Nursing Show podcast and blog. This topic area is so broad as to require it’s own series of podcasts. However, I think that there are some good resources for authoritative information out there on alternative and complimentary medicine.

One that has recently come to mind is rVita.com. The site presents information is an easy to read format, features links to authoritative studies and seems to tell it like it is. We all know that some of the claims of the herbal and complementary medicine producers lack scientific backing and thorough research, but there are products out there that have a positive effect on health and wellness, when used as directed.

The biggest question for most nurses is “who and what do you believe?” I think rVita solves this problem. They summarize the currently available research and provide links back to their sources so that you can check for yourself. They include links to specific studies as well as to reports from the NIH and CDC. There is also an option to provide feedback directly from visitors so that you may supply your own opinion.

I am talking with the content director for rVita and hope that she will be able to occasionally post pertinent information here on the Nursing Show site about complementary medicine and alternative therapies for you to use in your nursing practices every day.

My goal is that this will continue to expand the information available here at the Nursing Show and provide the listeners and visitors a chance to learn more about this area of patient care.

———————-

Full disclosure: I was asked to review this site by it’s authors but did not receive any compensation to do so.

Category: medications, treatments | No Comments »

Malignant Hyperthermia

July 5th, 2008 by podmedic

A listener to the show from Australia, Jerry Barrett, sent me this article he had written on an ambulance transport patient and the information he discovered following that call.  It’s a great look at Malignant Hyperthermia for the readers here.  The text below is reproduced with permission from the author.

References and links are available at the end of the article

——————-

Malignant Hyperthermia: An on road experience by Jerry Barrett

‘Malignant Hyperthermia [MH] is an inherited myopathic disorder characterized by a marked increase in metabolic rate. The reported incidence varies considerably but is approximately 1:50,000, rapid and effective treatment is essential to avoid mortality: over the last 30 years the fatality rate has fallen from 70% to about 5%.” 1

This paper describes a recent experience with a collapsed patient suffering from MH and the clinical implications of this syndrome to pre-hospital care practitioners.

The Case

We received a Priority One call for an unresponsive male occupant of a motor vehicle, collapsed at the steering wheel in a shopping centre car park.

On arrival, the initial visual assessment presented a middle aged male in the driving seat slumped forward over a car’s steering wheel. Initial verbal prompts failed to illicit a response; the patient had a GCS of 10/15 [E1,V4,M5]. There was no obvious indication of alcohol, CO, or substance abuse however the patient appeared to have a very wet shirt and his skin was hot to touch. A patent airway was evident from incoherent mumblings that could be heard once I approached the patient. A bystander who had commenced initial care of the patient commented that the patient seemed to respond well to cold water being thrown over him [also explaining the wet appearance of the patient]. 1

Following the initial primary survey indicating GCS 10/15, SPO2 99%, pulse 99 bpm, NIBP 170/70 and resps 24, the patient seemed to gain some composure and sat back in his seat. Although not aware of his surroundings the patient volunteered the fact that he suffered from Malignant Hyperthermia and that he had started to feel hot and dizzy in the shopping centre so returned to his vehicle in an effort to drive home.

As there was no thermometer available, I had no indication of the actual temperature of this patient and although there was an apparent rise in the GCS to 12/15 [3,4,5] I indicated to my partner that time was of the essence and that we had to extract the patient from the car as soon as possible.

Once extracted from the vehicle and secured on the stretcher I commenced treatment. St John Ambulance Western Australia guidelines for hyperthermia tend to concentrate on heat stoke/ hyperglycaemia as the cause and indicate ‘time critical’ and the need for active cooling and IV resuscitation. As I was unable to determine an exact temperature of the patient I feared the worst and inserted a 14G IV cannula prior to urgent transport to the nearest appropriate hospital, less than10 minutes away. One hundred per cent oxygen via a re-breather and 3 lead ECG was applied [confirming tachycardia], and one litre of isothermic normal saline was commenced STAT, a phone call was made to the hospital ED to pre-warn them of our impending arrival.

En route we began active cooling of the patient by using cold packs under the axilla and groin as well as a wet burn dressing to the head and air conditioning redirected onto the patient. This initial ‘cool down’ made a significant improvement to the patient’s condition and his GCS rose to 15/15. Once the patient had regained his composure he confided that he had been experiencing headaches and episodes of feeling hot and dizzy in the weeks prior to this event but did not wish to go to hospital.

Although he had been told that he had MH, and was aware that it was potentially fatal he refused to buy a Medical Alert bracelet for the reason that it might put up the price of his medical insurance! It was explained to him the implications of not having any indication of his condition should he have another episode and not be able to convey his condition verbally to emergency medical services.

Malignant Hyperthermia

“Malignant Hyperthermia [MH] is a rare pharmacogenetic disorder” however it does exist in the general population and can possibly be induced by stress or the use of Methylenedioxymethamphetamine [Ecstacy] as well as the common trigger agents such as Scoline and Halothane. In Western Australia Methoxyflurane is still in current use with St John Ambulance as an analgesic agent and its close relationship to Halothane makes it a possible trigger agent for MH, and in WA is therefore contraindicated in susceptible patients. 2, 3, 4

“There are unquantifiable rare things in life such as ‘hens teeth’, rocking horse poo and honest politicians and quantifiable rare things such as winning the Oz Lotto 1:8,000,000 or risk of death by lightning strike 1:1,000,000 or coming across MH 1:50,000.” 2

There is no clinical sign or cluster of signs to indicate MH, MH is a clinical chameleon. All signs of MH are non specific and may arise from multiple causes. Exposure to known triggering agents without reaction does not exclude MH susceptibility and there are many possible differential diagnoses for the various signs and symptoms: such as Sepsis, Hyperglyceamia or Substance [Ecstasy/ Amphetamine] abuse. 2

Etiology of Malignant Hyperthermia

MH is an inherited disorder. The genetics of MH are complex. Mutations in the human ryanodine receptor in skeletal muscle [a calcium release channel with a role in excitation-contraction coupling] are apparent in some families. Predisposition to MH has been defined in only three rare clinical myopathies. Inheritance of the MH gene and contact with specific agents can trigger abnormal calcium release from the sarcoplasmic reticulaum into the cytoplasm. This leads to myofibrillar contraction, depletion of high energy muscle phospate stores, accelerated metabolic rate, increased carbon dioxide and heat production, increased oxygen consumption and metabolic acidocis. The usual triggering agents are succinylcholine or any volatile anaesthetic agents. 3

Clinical Indicators of Malignant Hyperthermia

As previously noted, MH presents as a clinical chameleon1 even in the clinical setting. Therefore the ability to recognise this condition in the pre-hospital phase of assessment or treatment can be very difficult.

Below is a list of classic signs/ symptoms associated with a patient suffering from MH:

  • Muscular Rigidity
  • Tachycardia
  • Tachypnoea [increased CO2 excretion]
  • Increased Oxygen consumption
  • Metabolic Acidosis
  • Hyperthermia

A visual alert that the patient suffers from this rare condition would be of great advantage when trying to resuscitate a tachycardic, pyrexic patient with possible tachypnoea of unknown cause This will not always be the case, even in the clinical setting and one may need to rely on verbal indication of such conditions being suspected. These symptoms plague us every weekend on the streets with Ecstasy overdoses.

Management of Malignant Hyperthermia

MH is a clinical emergency and in the pre-hospital environment is an acute situation due to the rapid progression of this condition and the high mortality factor associated with it.

A suggested guideline for treating patients suffering from MH might include:

Administer 100% Oxygen

Gain IV access with large bore IV [possibly prior to the active cooling stage in order to maintain optimal conditions for IV access].

ECG monitoring

Active Cooling: chemical ice packs to axilla and groin regions, vehicle air conditioning flow directed onto patient and latent evaporation to head using damp swap/ dressing. And if available isothermic or cool IV fluid.

Urgent transport to an appropriate medical facility. This should also include a call to the ED to advise them of the condition of the patient and give the medical staff time to prepare for their arrival.

Summary

Malignant Hyperthermia is a rare but deadly condition. The rapid administration of Dantrolene Sodium is an effective treatment of MH once it has started its acute cycle; the drop of mortality from 80% to approximately 5% now gives us hope that rapid diagnosis and intervention reduces mortality. The price, short shelf life and rare use of Dantrolene make its supply limited, and there appears to be no national guidelines determining what supply level is mandatory in critical care environments.

——————–

Jerry has been a Paramedic since the early 80’s and served in several Middle Eastern Armed Forces after leaving the British Armed Forces. Moving to Perth in 2003 with his family he initially worked in the Operating Theatres as a Senior Anaesthetic Technician before joining St John Ambulance in 2004. Also gaining a qualification in Traditional Chinese Medicine Jerry also operates a First Aid Training company and has always been passionate about teaching. Jerry operates out of Cockburn Station in the Southern suburbs of Perth.

References

1. Textbook of Anaesthesia: 4th edition. Alan Aitkenhead, David Rowbotham & Graham Smith. Churchill Livingstone.

2. Malignant Hyperthermia MS PowerPoint presentation, Dr Mark Waddington, RPH March 2005.

3. Induction of Malignant Hyperthermia in Susceptible Swine by Ecstasy by Fiege M, Wappler F, Weisshorn R, Gerbershagen MU, Menge M, Schulte Am Esch J. Assistant Professor of Anaesthesiology, dagger Professor on Anaesthesiology, Staff Anaesthesiologist, Research Fellow, Professor of Anaesthesiology and Chair, Department of Anaesthesiology, University Hospital Hamburg-Eppendorf. Anaesthesiology. 2003 Nov;99 [5]:0032-1136

4. Stress-induced Malignant Hyperthermia in a head injured patient. Case report. Feuerman T, Gade GF, Reynolds R. Division of Neurosurgery, University of California, School of Medicine, Los Angeles.

Other Links:

Malignant Hyperthermia Association of the United States

WebMD on Malignant Hyperthermia

Category: on the side | No Comments »

ER Nursing and Episode 33

July 4th, 2008 by producer

Welcome to Episode 33

ProMedNetwork.comThe Nursing Show is a proud member of the ProMed Podcast Network.

podcastdownload.jpg Right Click to download (Macs Option Click)

itunesnew.jpg Subscribe with iTunes here (must have iTunes installed — it’s free)

RSS Feed to subscribe (copy url to Juice, Zune Marketplace, or your favorite podcatcher)

Click the arrow to play the Nursing Show

A podcast for Nurses, Nursing Students, and others interested in what it takes to be a Nurse

—————————-

Sponsors rnscc72.gifrnons72.gifrncc72.gifrn72.gifGet 10% off Pepid’s portable nursing solutionsNursing Show Listener Deals –Save 50% off first month of Blockbuster Total Access (visit

MyMovieSavings.com)———————————–NewsBrain Injury a Key Risk in Falls10 Questions with an ER Nurse24 Million Have Diabetes———————————–Tip of the Week — Interview with an ER Nurse Emergency Nurse Association Home PageCertification in Emergency Nursing———————————–Don’t miss an episode! Get the Nursing Show Newsletter by email. Fill out the email form in the right hand column of the site. Get it now!Comment or share ideas here on the comment link below or by email:Comment@NursingShow.comPodcasterNews, customize your newscast!Other Podcasts from Jamie Davis:

Contact Me!————————————————This Week is Codie Prevost with, “Not Just the Beer Talkin”Click here to check out other Songs from the MedicCast Network Podcasts at the iTunes Store.————————————-Creative Commons LicenseThis work is licensed under aCreative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.

Category: career guide, podcasts | 3 Comments »

Missouri Midwives Delivered by Court

July 3rd, 2008 by podmedic

pregnant_blue.gifThe Missouri State Supreme Court sided with the state’s trained but unlicensed midwives in removing a lower court’s injunction against a law that would allow these people to assist with home delivery of babies. The lower court ruled based on a lawsuit by the Missouri State Medical Association and other physician groups that said the law posed a danger to the public. The state’s high court said the doctors didn’t have the right to sue.

Read the full article here.

Many are touting this law as a victory for personal freedom and the right for families to have a home birth. Until this law was passed in August, 2007, Missouri was among 10 states that refused midwives without a nursing or medical degree the right to deliver babies. These home health specialists do however come with significant training and a strong apprenticeship program requiring them to train under an experienced midwife before being allowed to operate alone.

In a time of increasing health care costs and decreased access to care in rural areas, locally trained midwives may be the only cost effective and viable alternative to a system dominated by physicians, hospitals, and insurance companies who have little interest in providing anything but the minimum of care.

For more information on midwives and nurse- midwives and what the differences are between the two check out the comments on another article here at the Nursing Show site.

Category: on the side | No Comments »

Home Care Nurses Put on the Miles

July 2nd, 2008 by podmedic

nurse_eye_magnifying.jpgNursing is considered one of the top 5 recession proof careers. Home care nursing may not be as economically viable based on the price of gas and this article on the number of miles driven by the average home care nurse over the course of a year.

According to a report from the National Association for Home Care and Hospice, recent cuts and freezes in Medicare and Medicaid reimbursement rates have caused many home health agencies to cut back on necessary home visits and decrease the reach of their services.  This is especially hard hitting in rural areas where homebound patients depend on the services provided by these nurses.

Some patients have been told they are no longer in a home care agency’s range due to these cut backs.  Medicare used to offer a rural access fee to allow home health agencies and ambulance services additional funds to cover the increased mileage traveled.  That rural fee allowance was removed even as fuel prices continued to rise.

This problem underlines the basic issues that are tearing apart the U.S. health care system.  The patients most in need of primary care and home based services are the ones who are told they no longer have coverage.  These patients have no recourse but to access emergency services to arrange hospital transport to the ER, taking up valuable resources that might be needed for true emergencies.

When these patients have access to affordable and nearby health care, they do not have to abuse an overtaxed EMS and 911 system.  The answer is put forth in the article over at Medical News Today.

  1. Recognize home telehealth interactions as bona fide Medicare home health services; if home care nurses can do more monitoring of patients over the Internet, it will cut back in the number of miles they need to travel each week to visit patients and save those visits for critical care situations rather than routine monitoring
  2. Require the Secretary of Health and Human Services to revise the method for calculating annual market-based inflation updates and establish a temporary fuel cost add-on to 5
  3. Commit to preserve the annual inflation updates for home health and hospice as provided under the Medicare law
  4. Reinstate the 5 percent rural add-on for home health services delivered to patients residing in rural areas

Seems like a collection of good ideas to me.  Let’s see what we can do about getting these programs amended to make some sense.

Category: career guide | No Comments »

Transport Money Killing Flight Nurses

July 1st, 2008 by podmedic

digital_globe_sm.jpgWith the death toll from air ambulance crashes nearing record numbers (16 so far in 2008, 2 short of the record of 18), I have to wonder when the FAA or other agency is going to wake up and realize that these services operate under a questionable emergency mandate.

These helicopters and fixed wing aircraft fly out to pick up patients who are in critical condition in an effort to bring them to definitive care. However, they often fly in questionable weather conditions when other commercial services stay grounded. The argument is made that it is an emergency situation.

What happened to safety first?

The truth of the matter is that these services are profit makers for their health systems, bringing in many more dollars than the transport fees charged to the patients. In fact, when you add up the critical care, advanced surgical interventions, and recovery and rehab fees these patients are worth hundreds of thousands of dollars apiece!

I have talked to some local flight nurses and paramedics about how the safety processes work. It is often left up to the crews to determine if they think it’s safe enough to fly in questionable weather. A single dissenting vote and the helicopter stays on the ground. In the face of $100,000+ in lost income, though, I wonder if there isn’t some amount of pressure from above when a crew repeatedly opts for their own safety instead of taking a questionable transport call.

mspaviation_sm.jpgThe fact of the matter is, when you compare commercial safety records to public service based med-evac helicopters like the Maryland State Police units, there is a broad divide. The MSP helicopters have hard and fast rules for safe flying conditions. They don’t break them, period. If they are grounded then the transport falls to the ground ambulances.

The same rules should apply to the commercial services. There should be no “gray area” where employees, under pressure from their bosses, are expected to make decisions about their own lives and the lives of their co-workers. We don’t need to lose more valuable flight nurses, paramedics, or pilots because of the greed and glory seeking practices of a few physicians and administrators waiting safe and sound in the hospital for their well-insured patient to arrive.

It’s about saving lives (our own included), and not the money!

Category: career guide, on the side | No Comments »