musicislife
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When are these checked? Do you check them as part of respiratory vitals or initial assessment of breathing? For both Trauma and medical
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I work on a dedicated critical care transport unit (2 EMTs, 1 RN). The nurse expected us only to describe the lung sounds as "sounds like crap/doesn't sound like crap", or at least that's what he told us when we first started working with him, haha.I wonder what the utility or the proficency would be at the first responder level...
The nurse expected us only to describe the lung sounds as "sounds like crap/doesn't sound like crap", or at least that's what he told us when we first started working with him, haha.
I wonder what the utility or the proficency would be at the first responder level...
It is not that I am anti-going above and beyond, but I have come to learn that inderstanding of pathophysiology is what guides physical findings, not the other way around.
I work on a dedicated critical care transport unit (2 EMTs, 1 RN). The nurse expected us only to describe the lung sounds as "sounds like crap/doesn't sound like crap", or at least that's what he told us when we first started working with him, haha.
my instructor said clear or unclear
That adds nothing. Why bother?
especially don't run out and buy a $100 stethoscope for that.
We obviously operate on different types of service/care then, I don't worry about performing tasks based on whether or not things may be seen as this or that. I provide ALS and BLS care to a patient who needs my assistance and based on my education and protocols decide what is best for my patient, not whether I am wasting time or not, most of my transports are >20 min to a ED, I would rather auscultate lung/cardiac sounds than twiddle my thumbs. Luckily though where I work RN's usually require a more detailed report from me than "sounds like crap"......
I do it on every patient, it takes about 6 seconds and can actually give me some clinical enlightenment on a patients condition, as a paramedic we only have a few diagnostic tools to use, your stethoscope being one, why waste it.