Did you get the IV?
Sometimes it seems like your performance on the whole call can be reduced to the success or failure of the IV start. Rarely does the successful treatment of the patient hinge on a successful IV placement but sometimes it can certainly feel that way.
The best way to ensure that you’re ready when that make or break it IV start does come your way is to start a lot of them when the pressure is not on. If you wait until game day to practice, you’re a whole lot more likely to fail.
The single biggest factor that separates the IV virtuoso from the weekend hacker is practice and experience, so when the patient could use an IV, jump in there. The patient’s a kid. … Get in there. The patient is a frail, elderly woman on Coumadin. … Get in there. IVs are nothing to fear. Start practicing these six IV start tips. Before you know it, you’ll be an IV starting superstar.
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I hope you’re sitting down for this. I trust that a good number of my readers do indeed sit while surfing the internet so I’m just going to tell you this strait up. Sometimes … patients lie. They do. Occasionally they intentionally tell us bold, outright lies. And it gets worse. With even greater frequency they are just plain inaccurate. They may not be intentionally deceiving us, they may be confused, misinformed, exaggerating, in denial, overwhelmed or embarrassed. Regardless of the reason, we are frequently faced with subjective information that isn’t all together accurate.
What’s an EMT to do?
I don’t want to suggest that you should skip or disregard your subjective assessment. The things that your patient tells you are vital and important clinical findings. Even inaccurate information can give you vital clues regarding the patient’s mental status and physical condition. But I’d also suggest that you put a premium on physical findings that give you instant and accurate information about the patient’s physical condition. The longer I work in emergency service the more I find myself falling back on basic patient assessment truths like this one:
Pay attention to your patient’s skin.
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