Clinical Pearls: How To Work Up Hypoxia Part 1
I was recently drafting some material for a client who I am tutoring regarding hypoxia. She is in a pulmonary rotation and this is a very common reason for consult. I think when you are providing a consult service (which can receive a high volume of patients) keeping things focused on your organ system, standardizing your approach, and developing automation’s are the key to efficiency. The cool thing is that when you systematically work through the causes of hypoxia you can simplify the process of coming to the most accurate diagnosis. Then you can offer the primary team a suggested plan of action and be the hero (or maybe just uphold your reputation as a trusted colleague 😉). This article is designed to help ease the process of working through the etiology and focuses heavily on pathophysiology. If you can appreciate the pathway of oxygen delivery from the atmosphere all the way through to delivery at the tissue level you can better understand the disease states and more easily come to a diagnosis (or three, as is our common reality).
Clinical Pearls: Ventilator Modes 101
There are a number of reasons why ventilators are confusing, and I’ll break down how to simplify these factors in this blog post. But the big takeaway is this: just because a patient seems controlled well on the vent does not mean he is; do not leave the task of interpreting the vent and the patient’s response to the vent to others. It is incumbent on you to educate yourself about what the knobs, numbers, and waveforms mean in order to better treat your patient. Let’s talk vent basics and it starts with understanding the mode.
Clinical Pearls: Procedures Performed In An ICU
What exactly can I do as an AGACNP working in an ICU? Commonly encountered question with the answer being fairly straight forward, with a little variation. Several factors exist which effect routine practice and this includes your training, your credentials (with the hospital), the comfort level of your attending, and the culture of scope allowance at your specific workplace. I’ve worked places where I do it all, and places where I do less. I find this varies most by work team structure and culture. The more staff available, including medical trainees the fewer procedures you will likely perform. Most students are aware of the common procedures we perform (central lines, dialysis catheters, and arterial lines) but there are a whole host of procedures we could perform. In this article I’ll discuss the myriad technical skills we as nurse practitioners can learn and perform to contribute to patient care.
Job Options For AGACNP Nurse Practitioners
It is a common occurrence that NPs who I talk with personally or read about in forums indicate they do not understand the possible roles they can serve as an adult gero acute care nurse practitioner. Most people see that certification and think “I don’t want to be an ICU NP; not choosing that path.” The purpose of this article is to highlight the many, many different pathways you can take with your AGACNP certification. Obviously, being an acute care NP I possess some bias, especially given my personal job acquisition experience (more on that later). Having disclosed that, I do want to add that I speak with around 50 NPs a year who represent primarily FNP and ACNP certifications and am aware of the national trends in hiring. Trust me when I say, I’d be willing to bet there are far more possibilities out there for you as an ACNP than you realize.