The most effective way to prevent spread of disease
Hand washing
Vital signs consist of...?
- Respiratory rate
- Pulse
- Blood pressure
- SPO2
What is the different between blunt-force trauma and penetration trauma?
BFT: Caused by a blow NOT go through skin
PT: Go through skin
Who has the most common endocrine emergency?
Diabetic patient
Definition of Acute
Short and sudden pain
Nosocomial infection
Health Care Associated Infections (HAIs)
What is the different between thready pulse and bounding pulse?
Thready pulse: Weak and rapid pulse
Bounding pulse: Unusually strong pulse
Difference between signs and symptom?
Signs: Patient's condition that you can SEE
Symptoms: Patients conditions that patients TELL you
OLDCARTS
Onset
Location
Duration
Character
Aggravating/Associated factors
Relieving factors
Temporal factors
Severity of symptoms
Pain characteristics
Onset
Quality
Intensity
Location
Associated symptoms
What causes the pain
Effect on activities
Effect on psyche
Pain control measures
What are the links in the chain of infection?
1. Infectious Agent (pathogen)
2. Reservoir
3. Portal of exit
4. Mode of transmission
5. Port of enter
6. Susceptible Host
What may hypotension cause?
Insufficient perfusion of internal organs
O: Information from direct observations using 5 senses
S: Information that patients tell you
6 parts of primary assessment
- General impression
- Mental status
- Airway
- Breathing
- Circulation
- Patient's priority
Errors in pain assessment
1. Bias
2. Vague or unclear questioning
3. Patient not providing accurate pain information
What are the 4 rules of surgical asepsis?
1. Know what sterile
2. Know what is not sterile
3. Separate sterile from unsterile
4. Remedy contamination immediately
What may hypertension cause?
Rupture of the arteries and destruction of organs
2 main elements in nervous system examination
1. MENTAL STATUS obtained during PRIMARY assessment
2. Examination of the body for signs of DYSFUNCTION
Technique of physical examination
Inspect: Abnormalities in symmetry, color, shape, movement
Palpation: Press on injured area to determine abnormalities in shape, temperature, texture, sensation
Auscultation: Listen to patient's chest for abnormalities such as decreased or absent breath sounds
What is SF 558 form?
Emergency Treatment Record
What are the purposes of Surgical Asepsis (Sterile Technique)?
- To prevent contamination of open wound
- To isolate the operative area
- To maintain a sterile field for surgery
1. Radial
2. Brachial
3. Carotid
4. Femoral
5. Popliteal
6. Dorsalis pedis
7. Posterior tibial
Elements of the musculoskeletal system history
- Prior injury in that area
- Blood-thinning medications or medications that may delay clotting
- Use history to determine if a medical problem caused the traumatic injury
Abrasion
Types of pain
- Nociceptive pain
- Neuropathic pain
- Cancer pain
- Psychogenic pain
- Chronic pain
- Idiopathic pain