katgrl2003
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Posts posted by katgrl2003
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Superglue!
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I agree with AK, calvert is very good. I was home schooled during 2nd grade, and that's what my parents used.
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I agree, I love kids. Especially the ones I can give back to parents when they start crying. :twisted:
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Note to self: Don't watch stuff that Kaisu posts when parents are in the room. That was flippin hilarious!
-Kat
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I am not nice.
Was that ever in question?
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That explains the growling in your posting name.
Sheath the claws, friend, I, for one, am harmless to you.
No worries, Rich. I trust most of the guys here. And it's not a growl, short for girl (been using the nickname since I graduated high school).
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I've been hit on just about every shift I work, whether it's patients or partner. I got used to it, and can laugh it off. However, if they touch me (like a certain prisoner did), they will be handing a particular piece of anatomy to the triage nurse. :twisted:
-Kat
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Welcome back, Cheeky! I'm hoping the baby comes home soon. Stay safe!
-Kat
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Richard, I actually work with someone who uses the camera on his phone to take pictures of what he leaves in the toilet. We have all learned to be very wary of anything he tries to show us. It's a whole new ick factor.
-Kat
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Ruff, the only thing I could think of when I read that was:
OOOOWWWWWW!!!!!!
Next thought:
EEEEWWWWWW!!!!!!!
Thank you. I now need to find bleach to erase the image from my mind.
-Kat
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So technically all of us that show human compassion are actually touching our patients more than what is required to do our jobs.
And I'm damn proud to be a part of that group.
-Kat
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ERDoc- Why the chest tubes?
My best guess, have warm fluid running in one, and out the other. Warm him from the inside out.
-Kat
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Hallelujah! Congrats!
-Kat
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"Good Sam., 5 Nora ??, ....we are attempting CPR but patient is fighting us." NO kidding. For real.
Actually had something similar happen to me a few weeks ago. Medic crew coming from an outlying hospital was asking for another medic because their patient just coded. My partner hopped in the back of their truck, and I followed in ours. Unloaded pt at ER, rode the rails into room.
Weird thing #1: Pt's chest would not rise after compressions.
Weird thing #2: Pt was pushing our arms away during compressions, but when we would stop, so would she, as she had no pulse, no respiratory effort. It was obvious she was trying to keep us away.
Weird thing #3: Pt WALKED out of the hospital one week later.
It's official. Patients are weird.
-Kat
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But very rarely was the DNR paperwork ever WITH the patient. "Oh, it's waiting for them at Hospice." :roll: There wasn't really a doubt about it's existence, you can't BE a Hospice patient without a DNR. My mother worked at the inpatient unit for years- I know their procedures pretty well. The paperwork exists, it's just not where it needs to be.
I've actually transported a hospice pt that didn't have a DNR. THAT was a fun run. Long distance transfer, hospital, family, and the hospice facility once we got there all said the paperwork wasn't complete yet. And of course after the run, everyone told us they didn't expect her to survive the trip. Gee, thanks!
-Kat
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Oh wow. That's gotta be one of the best ever.
-Kat
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I have seen clusters happen in the field and in the er. It happens. I had never worked a code before two months ago, then we work three in one month, two in 45 minutes. One of our patients coded in the er, and the doc let my medic partner run the code. His reasoning? "You guys do this a heck of a lot more than we do." It ran smoothly. Screwups happen. Just make sure you learn from them.
-Kat
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One of those reporters is from a local station in Indy. Great, I can now say Indy is famous because a reporter doesn't know how to drive an ATV.
-Kat
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I had a shift like that last night. I kept saying things like, "I'm bored!", "We haven't had ----- run in awhile". I even took my boots off and got a four hour nap (impressive for night shift.) Nothing worked until 0630 (half hour til shift change). At that point, I didn't care I would get off late. I was bored out of my mind!
-Kat
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I'm curious, what situation would IN Fentanyl be more desirable than another route? I can understand someone on it chronically or something but I'm having a hard time coming up with one for prehospital.
Our medical director is all about pain relief. If someone has pain greater than 3/10, we can give them Fentanyl. He also wants to reduce the number of iv sticks we do, as it can lead to a greater risk of getting stuck. It's also great for peds. We can give them pain meds without terrifying them with needles.
-Kat
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In our protocols we can given Fentanyl, Versed, and Narcan IN. I haven't seen Versed or Narcan given this way, but I've seen Fentanyl given twice. Both times the patient complained of an aftertaste, but they were relaxing by the time they finished talking.
-Kat
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Thanks Brent! Now I'll never be able to eat frog legs again.
-Kat
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Yup. Little cajun restaurant in Monrovia and I think Mooresville called Zydeco's. Frog legs, alligator, crawdads, poboys, gumbo, jumbalaya. Ok, now my mouth is watering.
-Kat
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I know how you make frog legs jump.
Hot frying pan.
Yummy. Frog legs.
-Kat
How old were you when?
in Funny Stuff
Posted
3 (I lived 30 minutes away from NASA headquarters)
...When you realized money doesn't solve everything?