I'm more than a little concerned that all of the paramedics here are nay-saying what is taught and telling the basics to move away from instructive texts, which I'm absolutley fine with WHEN YOU TELL THEM WHY!
"Google It" tells me one of two things: you either do not know what you are talking about and trying to be cool like the rest of the people who are saying whatever, or you are too lazy to take the time to instruct your junior healthcare providers and have no business on an 'educational' forum.
Actually... the reason I didn't spell out the research was because it has already been stated numerous times before on the forum AND I was in the middle of doing something else which didn't permit me to type a long reply with the research.
I don't always have someone hand feed me the information... I look it up for myself so I suggest you do the same.
I'll at least give you a head start on your research:
- CVA: AHA recommends mild-moderate CVA patients receive only room air. Evidence suggests better outcomes than when these patients receive oxygen.
- MI: Research dating back to the 1950's and recently validated in the 2000's show worsened myocardial ischemia, decreased cardiac output, narrowing of the coronary vessels, and no benefit with oxygen administration. Most MI patients are oxygenating just fine systemically. Oxygen administration has been proven to NOT increase oxygen delivery or reduce tissue death on the other side of the coronary occulsion.
- Neonatal Resuscitation: The NRP program guidelines were changed to reflect neonatal resuscitation to initially begin with room air only. This is something Europe has been doing forever. The US has been about the only one who insisted on using oxygen. Research shows decreased time to first breath, first cry, and overall better outcomes.
- ROSC: Oxidative damage as a result of the re-perfusion sends cells to their ultimate death and not restoration as you would think. Research here is ongoing but much evidence suggests minimal O2 titrated to saturation above 94%.
PA protocols specifically address the new evidence regarding oxygen administration and state to TITRATE OXYGEN ADMINISTRATION to patient needs. It is defined as an SpO2 above 94% and NOT high-flow.
Under neonatal resuscitation protocol it is also further broken down. A neonate does not present with an SpO2 in the typical normal range. If you check their saturation immediately after birth you will see 60% range, 70% range, etc until their body transitions to the extrauterine circulation.
The reason the SpO2 is broken down is so providers do not administer oxygen unnecessarily to these babies because of the negative effects and that it serves no purpose.
I have also read research that found COPD patients should have their oxygen saturation titrated to right around their baseline and not 100%. And no... this has nothing to do with that hypoxic drive myth either.
I spend prob half my time validating what I have been taught. I have even had a ED physician (also a Medical Command physician) along with an RN give me :censored::censored::censored::censored: because I requested orders for captopril (which we carry) in a obvious CHF patient. I asked the doc why I was denied and all he could say was, "generally patients are only on ACE inhibitors for long term use and we don't give them emergently"... I was quite taken back by this response. We carry captopril and evidence suggest much better outcome with early ACE inhibitor use. And not to mention many EMS systems and hospital ED's give early ACE inhibitors for CHF. They also claimed that no other medic had ever requested orders for captopril.
You need to take the lead and find out for yourself. Don't play follow the leader and believe everything your textbook says. It's unfortunate the textbook still teaches what it does about oxygen.