Just a question on a call I ran today that I'd like some outside opinions on, as my thoughts differed from the medic on scene and my partner.
Presented with a 45yo male, c/c CP x3 days, s/c shortness of breath and dizziness. PT is hunched over when we get in (not true tripoding though), flushed skin, warm, clammy. PT was placed on a NRB by Fire before BP 160p, Pulse 100, SPO2 of 100% on the NRB (PT prolly woulda been fine on a cannula). PT appears lethargic, and is slow to respond to questions, usually had to repeat myself 1-3 times for each question. Only med Hx I can get from him is that he's a diabetic and no cardiac history. So I figure, while getting all other vitals, I'd grab a blood sugar, due to presentation, hx, etc. Got an ALS intercept, etc.
On arrival, the medic asks why I took a sugar, saying it was basically not indicated due to not being true AMS, and the nature of the call being cardiac- also making a point that if the glucometer gave an incorrect reading, patient care/treatment may have gone in the wrong direction. My partner basically agreed, said if it was her tech, she wouldn't have checked.
Besides possibly poking the PT's finger unnecessarily, I don't see the harm in having done it on this call. Yes, the lethargy and slow responses could have been due to his shortness of breath, but my train of thought was it also could have been related to a dipping blood sugar possibly- in either case, it's another, in my opinion, "relevant" vital to take on this person due to his history.
Opinions?
Presented with a 45yo male, c/c CP x3 days, s/c shortness of breath and dizziness. PT is hunched over when we get in (not true tripoding though), flushed skin, warm, clammy. PT was placed on a NRB by Fire before BP 160p, Pulse 100, SPO2 of 100% on the NRB (PT prolly woulda been fine on a cannula). PT appears lethargic, and is slow to respond to questions, usually had to repeat myself 1-3 times for each question. Only med Hx I can get from him is that he's a diabetic and no cardiac history. So I figure, while getting all other vitals, I'd grab a blood sugar, due to presentation, hx, etc. Got an ALS intercept, etc.
On arrival, the medic asks why I took a sugar, saying it was basically not indicated due to not being true AMS, and the nature of the call being cardiac- also making a point that if the glucometer gave an incorrect reading, patient care/treatment may have gone in the wrong direction. My partner basically agreed, said if it was her tech, she wouldn't have checked.
Besides possibly poking the PT's finger unnecessarily, I don't see the harm in having done it on this call. Yes, the lethargy and slow responses could have been due to his shortness of breath, but my train of thought was it also could have been related to a dipping blood sugar possibly- in either case, it's another, in my opinion, "relevant" vital to take on this person due to his history.
Opinions?
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