CVT Exam Room MED 250

44
CVT Exam Room MED 250 Daymar College Lisa H. Young, RN,BSN, Med.

description

CVT Exam Room MED 250. Daymar College Lisa H. Young, RN,BSN, Med. Interpersonal Communication. Verbal Communication Written Communication Symbolic Language English as a second language Nonverbal Communication Listening. Pain. Acute or Chronic Types of pain Pain Assessment (Pain Scale). - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of CVT Exam Room MED 250

Page 1: CVT Exam Room MED 250

CVT Exam RoomMED 250

Daymar CollegeLisa H. Young, RN,BSN, Med.

Page 2: CVT Exam Room MED 250

Interpersonal Communication

• Verbal Communication• Written Communication• Symbolic Language• English as a second language• Nonverbal Communication• Listening

Page 3: CVT Exam Room MED 250

Pain

• Acute or Chronic

• Types of pain

• Pain Assessment (Pain Scale)

Page 4: CVT Exam Room MED 250

Clinical Environment and Safety

• Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA)

• Emergency Plan– Hepatitis B Vaccinations– TB Skin test (PPD test)

Page 5: CVT Exam Room MED 250

Medical Records & Documentation

• Consent to Release Information

• Medical Forms

• Charting (SOAP)

• Patient History

Page 6: CVT Exam Room MED 250

Vital Signs

• Temperature (Oral / Aural / Axillary / Rectal)

Page 7: CVT Exam Room MED 250

Vital Signs

• Pulse– Apical– Radial

Page 8: CVT Exam Room MED 250

Vital Signs

• Respirations• Oxygen Saturation

Page 9: CVT Exam Room MED 250

Vital Signs• Blood pressure– Sphygmomanometer (cuff widths)– Stethoscope– Brachial artery– Kortikoff sound

• Average blood pressure readings– Newborn: 80/50 mmHg– Infant: 90/60 mmHg– Child 3 – 6 yrs.: 100/60 mmHg – Child 10 yrs.: 110/60 mmHg– Child 14 yrs.: 130/60 mmHg– Adult: 120/80 mmHg– Elderly > 60 yrs. : 155/95 mmHg

Page 10: CVT Exam Room MED 250

• Systolic pressure: highest pressure• Diastolic pressure: lowest pressure• Pulse pressure• Hypertension• Malignant Hypertension• Hypotension• Classifications

BP Classification Normal Pre-Hypertensive

Hypertension

SBP (mmHg) 119 or below

120 to 139 140 or above

DBP (mmHg) 79 or below

80 to 89 90 or above

Page 11: CVT Exam Room MED 250

Normal Vital Signs

Page 12: CVT Exam Room MED 250

Height and Weight Measurement

• Height

• Weight

Page 13: CVT Exam Room MED 250

Physical Examination

• Review of systems

• Palpation / Percussion / Auscultation/ Inspection/Mensuration/Manipulation

• Glasgow Coma Scale

Page 14: CVT Exam Room MED 250

Eyes Opening Response

Spontaneous-open with blinking at baselineOpens to verbal command, speech, or shoutOpens to pain, not applied to faceNone

4 points

3 points

2 points

1 point

Verbal Response

OrientedConfused conversation, but able to answer questionsInappropriate responses, words discernibleIncomprehensible speechNone

5 points4 points

3 points

2 points1 point

Motor Response

Obeys commands for movementPurposeful movement to painful stimulusWithdraws from painAbnormal (spastic) flexion, decorticate postureExtensor (rigid) response, decerebrate postureNone

5 points4 points

3 points

2 points

1 point

Page 15: CVT Exam Room MED 250

Review of Systems• Hematologic• Endocrine• Psychiatric• Neurological• Eyes• Cardiovascular• Respiratory• HEENT• Gastrointestinal• Integumentary• Musculoskeletal• Urinary• Genital

Page 16: CVT Exam Room MED 250

Procedures / Diagnostic Test for the Cardiovascular System

• Aneurysmectomy• Angiography• Angioplasty• Arterial blood gases• Artery graft• Artificial pacemaker• Cardiac catheterization• Cardiac enzymes

• Cardiac MRI• Cardiolysis• Cardiorrhaphy• Cardioversion• Commissurotomy• CABG• Doppler

ultrasonography• Electrocardiogram

Page 17: CVT Exam Room MED 250

Physical Examination • Positioning the patientSitting positionFowler’s position / Semi-Fowler’s positionDorsal recumbent positionProne positionTrendelenburg positionKnee-chest position Jackknife position (proctologic)Lithotomy positionSims’ position

Page 18: CVT Exam Room MED 250

Aseptic Hand Washing

Page 19: CVT Exam Room MED 250

Non-Sterile Gloving

Page 20: CVT Exam Room MED 250

Medication Administration

• Conversions– Move the decimal point 3 places to the left or right– Large to smaller: move to the right (L > S)– Small to large: move to the left (S >L)– Change 200 mg to mcg = 200, 000 mcg– Metric scale: kg-hg-dag-g-dg-cg-mg X X mcg

Page 21: CVT Exam Room MED 250

Medication Administration

• Apothecary & Metric Equivalencies– 1000 ml = 1 liter– 1cc = 1 ml– 1 ounce = 30 cc or 30 ml– 1 dram = 4 ml– 1 grain = 60 mg– 1 tablespoon = 15 ml– 1 teaspoon = 5 ml

Page 22: CVT Exam Room MED 250

Injection Administrations

Page 23: CVT Exam Room MED 250

Injections

Page 24: CVT Exam Room MED 250

Subcutaneous Injection

Page 25: CVT Exam Room MED 250

Intradermal Injections

Page 26: CVT Exam Room MED 250

Intramuscular Injections

Page 27: CVT Exam Room MED 250

Z-Track Injections

• Medication is sealed deeply within the muscleand allows no exit path back into the subcutaneous tissue and skin

• Used when giving dark-colored medication solutions or irritating to the tissue

Page 28: CVT Exam Room MED 250

Capillary Stick

Page 29: CVT Exam Room MED 250

Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments (CLIA)

• Federal act• Quality standards • Health Care Financing Administration (HFCA)• Certification by Secretary of Health and

Human Services• Center of Disease (CDC)• Category of testing

Page 30: CVT Exam Room MED 250

Venipuncture

Page 31: CVT Exam Room MED 250

Basics of Hematology Testing• WBC count• RBC counts • Hemoglobin• Hematocrit• Platelet counts• MCV, MCHC, and MCH• ESR or sed rate• Blood typing

Page 32: CVT Exam Room MED 250

Blood Chemistry Testing

• Glucose• Electrolytes (sodium, potassium, chloride,

CO2)• Creatinine• BUN• Total protein • Albumin• Bilirubin levels

Page 33: CVT Exam Room MED 250

Blood Tube Collection

• Vacutainer Collection– Red– Blue– Green – Purple

– Reversed order if from an IV site

Page 34: CVT Exam Room MED 250

Blood Tubes

Page 35: CVT Exam Room MED 250

Labeling Blood Sample

• Patient’s surname, first and middle• Patient’s ID number• Date, time and initials of the collector

Page 36: CVT Exam Room MED 250

Venipuncture Procedure

• Assemble equipment• Approach patient in a friendly, calm manner. Gain the patient’s cooperation• Identify the patient correctly• Properly fill out appropriate requisition forms, indicating the test(s) ordered• Verify the patient’s condition.• Check for allergies• Position patient• Wash hands• Place tourniquet (2 inches above)• Locate desired vein and clean puncture site• Apply gloves• Insert needle, bevel up, at a 15 degree angle• Aspiration of the blood into syringe• Remove tourniquet.• Remove needle. Apply pressure (3 min.) Dressing app;lied.• Dispose of contaminated materials/supplies• Mix and label tubes• Deliver specimen(s) to laboratory.

Page 37: CVT Exam Room MED 250

Complications with Blood Collection• Fainting• Hematomas• Petechiae• Edema• Obesity• IV therapy• Damaged, Sclerosed, or occulded Veins• Hemoconcentration• Hemolysis• Collapsed Veins• Allergies• Thrombosis• Burned or Scarred Areas• Infections• Upper extremity on the side of a previous mastectomy• Superficial veins

Page 38: CVT Exam Room MED 250

Butterfly Venipuncture

Page 39: CVT Exam Room MED 250

Venipuncture with Vacutainer

Page 40: CVT Exam Room MED 250

Suture and Staple Removal

Page 41: CVT Exam Room MED 250

Clean Catch Urine Specimen

Page 42: CVT Exam Room MED 250

Urine Dipstick Analysis

Page 43: CVT Exam Room MED 250

Culture Testing

• Wound• Throat• Bacteria• Fecal

Page 44: CVT Exam Room MED 250

Ordered Tests

• Blood chemistry test• Hematology and coagulation• Microbiology• Blood serum• Centrifuge