General Tips Flashcards
1
Q
What should you be thinking of on your way to an RRT for one of your patients?
A
- What is the patient’s overall story and what has been your differential for those problems?
- What were the patient’s vitals/labs most recently? Did anything change?
2
Q
What do you need to assess in an RRT?
A
- First, ABCDE (airway, breathing, circulation, disability, everything else) -> if any of this is critically wrong then you must intervene.
- Second, find out who called the rapid and why.
- Third, assess the patient (exam and vitals) and decide what labs to get. Don’t be stingy on what to get -> if it might be useful then just get it.
- Fourth, assess what things you might need that you don’t have ready access to. Does this patient need pacer pads, an ET tube, pressors, blood, additional PIVs or central lines?
- Fifth, decide if you are in the right place or if the patient needs to be moved.
- Sixth, decide if other teams need to be called (e.g., anesthesia for airway, ENT for critical airway, surgery/IR for bleeding, neuro for stroke).
- Seventh, huddle with your team to assess what you’ve done, what your plan is, and if there is anything else that others can think of.
3
Q
The times you are most wrong are when ___________.
A
You’re most sure you’re right
4
Q
If your judgement tells you one thing and your test tells you another, then ______________.
A
Question the test
5
Q
Good quote: “The patient whose room you walk out of with only one thing on your differential is…
A
in trouble.”
6
Q
In patients who are tachycardic, always document __________________.
A
cap refill and extremities warm/cold