I have learned alot from this,i know that the supine is lying flat at your back and prone is lying on your chest, lithomoty is mostly used during birth delivery
@@inscope9325 i wasn't Actually Going to Adjust it... (Even tho it WAS just Saline, and On THE VERY LOWEST/SLOW Drip possible😶 After 6 days of Vomiting even ice chips ~> I felt Extremely Dehydrated
Theres is also the anterior and posterior axillary line landmarks used for other procedures. The mid-axillary line is the landmark used to place the V6 electrode.
I took one of these out of a patient. Myself .. I was in ICU. I told that nurse I was going to pull it out. She said we know we heard you and her, and her entourage walked out of the room. I pulled it out soon as she said it. They all got madder than hell..
💜🙏💪👍 blessings to everyone, if you haven't yet repented and accepted Jesus Christ as your Lord and Savior, please do so before it's too late, it's not God's will for none to perish Acts 2 vs 38 John 3 vs 16 Romans 10 vs 13
C&S stands for Culture and Sensitivity (commonly for investigating urinary tract infections). UA stands for Urinalysis (used to look at various components of the urine).
Hi, do you ignore the faint sound in your measurements. There is some 10-20 of faint beating sound before it becomes loud and clear and then faints again.
Could you teach us simple teaching how to read ECG for beginners and the basic only for clinical nurse not deep detail just the basic and the important
Hello, thanks for the comment! It is not best practice to go only by the needle jumping, as listening for the pulse through the stethoscope in correlation to where the needle is on the meter is best. A few reasons why you might not hear the pulse sound are: 1) Not enough pressure is applied to your stethoscope while listening. 2) Placement of the stethoscope's diaphragm is not over the brachial artery (where you palpate a pulse). 3)Make sure you are listening with the diaphragm side (I did say "bell" in the video, however, there are some stethoscopes with 2 sides for listening to adult/pediatric patients and/or high-frequency vs. low-frequency sounds). Hope one of these tips helps and feel free to reach out with any questions!
@@inscope9325 Thanks for the reply. It was a cheap one from Walmart and I returned it already as I just could not hear anything at all after following the instructions closely.Thanks.
@@jonsart5643 It was a cheap one from walmart that was permanently on.I returned it and bought a good digital one. I had a stroke in may because of high blood pressure.
@@binitadahal8612 Normally, when reading from the markings on a manual blood pressure gauge, the numbers should always be read as "even" numbers 118, 120, 122 etc. Even if the needle falls between markings (odd numbers do not exist when taking a manual blood pressure), some schools want you to choose the lower or higher number.
Is it horrible just because of the odd number? Because every other step is correct except the number stated (which would either be 118 or 120, very close to 119). So overall, its an excellent demonstration.
Our team appreciates your comment! I'll take a look through our video footage and see if we can come up with an IV piggy back video for you. I know just what you want, I hope I can make one :)