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Nursing Care

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Kelle Howard, RN, MSN Modified by: Darlene M. Wilson, MSN, RN Why dangerous --- rapid increase What happens -----Depleted --- Na --- s/s of altered lytes ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Nursing Care


1
Nursing Care Interdisciplinary Roles with
Adult Clients in the Emergency/Disaster
Environment
  • Kelle Howard, RN, MSN Modified by
  • Darlene M. Wilson, MSN, RN

2
Objectives
  • Discuss
  • Heat Stroke
  • Cold Related Emergencies
  • Drowning
  • Bites/Stings
  • Poisoning
  • Agents of Terrorism
  • Review with regard to each of the said topics
  • pathophysiology
  • causes
  • manifestations potential complications
  • treatment interventions
  • interdisciplinary management
  • Evaluation of Learning
  • Case studies

3
Heat StrokePathophysiology
  • Definition
  • Failure of the hypothalamic regulatory process
  • Inc. sweating ? vasodilatation ? Inc. RR ? sweat
    glands stop working ? core temp inc.? circulatory
    collapse
  • What makes this temperature so dangerous?
  • What happens to electrolytes?
  • Which ones do you worry about?
  • What are some signs/symptoms of these altered
    lytes?
  • What are critical labs values for these lytes?

4
Heat Strokes/s of electrolyte depletion
  • Na lt120 critical
  • Change in mental status
  • Combative, decreased LOC
  • Hallucinations
  • Loss of motor control
  • Cerebral edema hemorrhage
  • K lt2.8 critical
  • Hypo-reflexia, muscle weakness
  • Respiratory depression
  • Diarrhea
  • EKG changes

5
Heat StrokeCauses
  • Development is directly related to
  • Amount of time the body temperature is elevated
  • What are some common causes?

Next
6
Heat StrokeCauses
  • Strenuous activity in hot/humid environment
  • High fevers
  • Clothing that interferes with perspiration
  • Working in closed areas/prolonged exposure to
    heat
  • Drinking alcohol in hot environment

7
Heat StrokeManifestations Complications
  • What will your patient look like?

Next
8
Heat StrokeManifestations Complications
  • Core temp gt 104F
  • AMS
  • No perspiration
  • Skin hot, ashen, dry
  • Dec. BP
  • Inc. HR
  • S/S of what?

9
Heat StrokePrognosis
  • Related to
  • Age
  • Length of exposure
  • Baseline health status
  • Number of co-morbidities
  • Which co-morbidities would predispose your
    patient to heat related emergencies?

10
Heat StrokeTreatment Interventions
  • ABCs must stabilize
  • What assessments/interventions will you perform
    initially?
  • What do you think the goal of treatment is?
  • How would you achieve this goal?

Next
11
Heat StrokeTreatment Interventions
  • Goal
  • Decrease the core temperature
  • To what temperature? 102
  • Prevent shivering
  • Why? thorazine
  • How? what med is used? Antipsychotic, CNS
    depression
  • Attainment
  • Remove clothes, wet sheets, large fan
    (evaporative), ICE water bath (conductive), cool
    IV fluids
  • Would you use antipyretics?

12
Heat StrokeTreatment Interventions
  • Monitor for s/s of rhabdomyolysis
  • What is this?
  • How would you monitor for this?
  • Monitor for s/s disseminated intravascular
    coagulation (DIC)
  • What is this?
  • How would you monitor for this?

13
  • Rhabdomyolysis
  • Skeletal muscle breakdown
  • Monitor ARF cpk, creatinine, urine
  • DIC
  • Pathological activation of coagulation mechanisms
  • Monitor
  • bleeding and bruising
  • Coags platelets
  • ARF what will you see?

14
Heat StrokeInterdisciplinary Roles
  • Who would be involved in this clients care?
  • RN
  • MD - which ones?
  • RT
  • SW why?
  • Anyone else?

15
HypothermiaPathophysiology
  • Definition
  • Core temperature less than 95F (35C)
  • Core temp lt86F - severe hypothermia
  • Core temp lt78F - death
  • Heat produced by the body cannot compensate for
    cold temps of environment
  • 55-60 of all body heat is lost as radiant
    energy
  • Head, thorax, lungs
  • Dec body temp ? peripheral vasoconstriction ?
    shivering movement ? coma results lt78F

16
HypothermiaCauses
  • Exposure to cold temperatures
  • Inadequate clothing, inexperience
  • Physical exhaustion
  • Wet clothes in cold temperatures
  • Immersion in cold water/near drowning
  • Age/current health status predispose
  • What health issues would predispose a patient to
    hypothermia?

17
HypothermiaManifestations Complications
  • What will your patient look like?

18
HypothermiaManifestations Complications
  • Vary dependent upon core temp
  • Mild (93.2F - 96.8F)
  • Lethargy, confusion, behavior changes, minor HR
    changes, vasoconstriction
  • Moderate (86F 93.2F)
  • Rigidity, dec HR, dec RR, dec BP, hypovolemia,
    metabolic resp acidosis, profound
    vasoconstriction, rhabdomyolysis
  • Shivering usually disappears at 92F
  • What about each system?
  • Profound/(Severe) (lt86F)
  • Person appears dead attempt to re-warm to 90F
  • Reflexes vitals very slow
  • Profound bradycardia, asystole 64.4F, or Vfib
    71.6F usual cause of death?

Next
19
Hypothermia ModerateManifestations
Complications
  • Hematologic
  • HCT inc. as volume dec. ?
  • cold blood thickens, thrombus occurs
  • Neuro
  • Stroke ?
  • lack of blood flow due to vasoconstriction/thrombu
    s
  • Cardiac
  • Irritable myocardium ?
  • atrial ventricular fibrillation, MI
  • Respiratory
  • PE
  • Acidosis ?
  • lactic acid builds up ? anaerobic metabolism ?
    metabolic acidosis
  • Renal
  • Dec blood flow, dehydration, rhabdomyolysis ?
  • Acute Kidney Injury

20
HypothermiaPrognosis
  • Dependant upon
  • Core body temperature
  • Co-morbidities

21
HypothermiaTreatment Interventions
  • ABCs must stabilize
  • What interventions will you perform initially?
  • What do you think the goal of treatment is?
  • How would you achieve this goal?

Next
22
HypothermiaTreatment Interventions
  • Goal
  • Rewarming to temp of 95F
  • Correction of dehydration acidosis
  • Treat cardiac dysrhythmias
  • Attainment
  • Passive active external rewarming
  • What are some examples?
  • Passive move to warm place dry place
  • remove wet clothes, apply
    warm blankets
  • Active -- body to body contact, fluid or air
    filled blankets,
  • Active core rewarming
  • warm IV fluids, heated humidified O2,
  • peritoneal , gastric or colonic lavage
  • What should be warmed first core or
    extremities?
  • Why?

23
HypothermiaTreatment Interventions
  • Monitor
  • Core temp
  • for marked vasodilatation hypotension
  • After drop
  • What is this?
  • Teach
  • Warm clothes hats, layers, high calorie foods,
    planning

24
HypothermiaInterdisciplinary Management
  • Who would be involved in this clients care?
  • RN
  • MD
  • PT/OT
  • SW
  • CM
  • RT

25
Submersion InjuryCauses Incidence
  • 8000 submersion injuries
  • per year
  • 40 children under 5yrs
  • Categorized as
  • Drowning
  • Near drowning
  • Immersion syndrome
  • Risk factors
  • Inability to swim entanglement with objects in
    water
  • ETOH or drug use
  • Trauma
  • Seizures
  • Stroke

Next
26
Submersion Injury Pathophysiology
  • Definition
  • Drowning
  • Death from suffocation after submersion in water
    or other fluid medium
  • Near Drowning
  • Survival from potential drowning
  • Immersion syndrome
  • Immersion in cold water ? stimulation of vagus
    nerve potentially fatal dysrhythmias
    (bradycardia)

27
Submersion Injury Pathophysiology
  • Death is caused by hypoxia
  • Victims that aspirate
  • secondary to aspiration swallowing of fluid
  • fluid aspirated into pulmonary tree ? PULMONARY
    EDEMA - HYPOXIA
  • Victims that do not aspirate
  • bronchospasm airway obstruction ? dry
    drowning - HYPOXIA

28
Submersion Injury Manifestations Complications
  • What will your patient look like?
  • Pulmonary
  • Cardiac
  • Neuro

29
Submersion Injury Manifestations Complications
  • Dependant upon length of time amount of
    aspirate
  • Pulmonary
  • Ineffective breathing, dyspnea, distress, arrest,
    crackles rhonchi, pink frothy sputum with
    cough, cyanosis
  • What interventions would you perform?
  • Cardiac
  • Inc./dec. HR, dysrhythmia, dec. BP, cardiac
    arrest
  • Neuro
  • Panic, exhaustion, coma

30
Submersion Injury Treatment Interventions
  • ABCs must stabilize
  • What interventions will you perform initially?
  • What should you assume with all victims?
  • What do you think the goal of treatment is?
  • How would you achieve this goal?

Next
31
Submersion Injury Treatment Interventions
  • Goal
  • Correct
  • hypoxia
  • acid/base balance
  • fluid imbalances
  • correct dysrhythmias
  • Attainment
  • Anticipate intubation
  • 100 O2 via non-rebreather
  • IV access
  • Near drowning victims
  • Nursing assessment
  • Pulmonary Edema
  • SPO2

32
Submersion Injury Interdisciplinary Management
  • Who would be involved in this clients care?
  • RN
  • MD
  • RT
  • SW
  • Chaplain

33
Real Life Drowning Victim
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vroFGBt8xEisfeature
    related

Next
34
Bites StingsPathophysiolgy
  • Direct tissue damage is a product of
  • Animal size
  • Characteristics of animals teeth
  • Strength of jaw
  • Toxins released
  • Death is due to
  • Blood loss
  • Allergic reactions
  • Lethal toxins

35
Poisoning
  • 1-800-221-1212
  • Treatments
  • Activated charcoal, gastric lavage, eye/skin
    irrigation, hemodialysis, hemoperfusion, urine
    alkalinization, chelating agents and antidotes
    acetylcysteine (Mucomyst)
  • Contraindicated (charcoal gastric lavage)
  • AMS, ileus, diminished bowel sounds, ingestion of
    substance poorly absorbed by charcoal (alkali,
    lithium, cyanide)

36
Agents of TerrorismTypes
  • Bioterrorism
  • Anthrax, plague, tularemia, smallpox, botulism,
    hemorrhagic fever
  • Chemical terrorism
  • Sarin, phosgene, mustard gases
  • Radiological/Nuclear terrorism

37
Tularemia
Plague
38
Botulism The good, the bad the ugly
39
Agents of TerrorismTreatment
  • Bioterrorism
  • Anthrax, Plague, Tularemia
  • Treatment antibiotics (streptomycin or
    gentamicin)
  • Smallpox
  • Treatment vaccine
  • Botulism
  • Treatment antitoxin
  • Hemorrhagic fever
  • Treatment no established treatment
  • Provided there is sufficient supply treatment
    occurs in a timely manner!!!!!!!

40
Agents of TerrorismTreatments
  • Chemical Terrorism
  • Sarin gas
  • Nerve gas (highly toxic)
  • Can cause death within minutes of exposure
    paralyzing respiratory muscles
  • Treatment antidote atropine 2-PAM chloride
  • Phosgene gas
  • Colorless gas
  • Can cause respiratory distress, pulmonary edema
    death
  • Treatment treat S/S, remove from exposure
  • Mustard gas
  • Yellow/brown in color , garlic like odor
  • Can irritate eyes, burn skin and creates
    blisters, damage lungs if inhaled
  • Treatment decontamination, treat symptoms

41
Agents of TerrorismTreatments
  • Radiologic/Nuclear Terrorism
  • Radiologic dispersal devices (RDDs)
  • Aka dirty bombs
  • Made of explosives radioactive material
  • When detonated smoke radioactive dust enter
    air
  • Treatment limit contamination (cover mouth
    nose) decontamination (shower, proper disposal
    of clothing)
  • Ionizing radiation (nuclear)
  • Acute radiation syndrome (ARS)
  • External radiation exposure

42
Radiologic/Nuclear Terrorism(FYI)
  • American Nuclear Society
  • Extremity (arm, leg, etc) Xray 1 mrem
  • Dental Xray 1 mrem
  • Chest Xray 6 mrem
  • Nuclear Medicine (thyroid scan) 14 mrem
  • Neck/Skull Xray 20 mrem
  • Pelvis/Huip Xray 65 mrem
  • CAT Scan 110 mrem
  • Upper GI Xray 245 mrem
  • Barium Enema 405 mrem
  • A single dose of around 300,000-500,000 mrem is
    usually considered produce death in 50 of the
    cases.

43
BioterrorismInterdisciplinary Management
  • Who would be involved in this clients care?
  • EVERYONE

44
Emergency Nursing
  • Triage
  • Rapid assessment skill to determine acuity
  • Threat to life, vision, or limb are treated
    before other patients

45
Emergency Nursing- Primary Survey
  • Airway, breathing, circulation, and disability
    (ABCD)
  • Identifies life-threatening conditions
  • Necessary interventions started immediately
    before proceed to next step of the survey

46
Primary Survey
  • Airway with cervical spine stabilization and/or
    immobilization
  • Signs/symptoms of compromised airway
  • Dyspnea
  • Inability to vocalize
  • Presence of foreign body in airway
  • Trauma to face or neck (See Notes below for
    Primary Survey)

47
Primary Survey
  • Maintain airway Least to most invasive method
  • Open airway using the jaw-thrust maneuver

48
Primary Survey
  • Maintain airway Least to most invasive method
    cont.
  • Suction and/or remove foreign body
  • Insert nasopharyngeal/oropharyngeal airway
  • Endotracheal intubation
  • Cricothyroidotomy or tracheostomy

49
Primary Survey
  • Stabilize/immobilize cervical spine
  • Face, head, or neck trauma and/or significant
    upper torso injuries
  • Remember Cervical Spine Stabilization is
    always part of the primary survey!!!

50
Primary Survey
  • Breathing Assess for dyspnea, cyanosis
    paradoxic/asymmetric chest wall movement,
    decreased/absent breath sounds, tachycardia,
    hypotension
  • Administer high-flow O2 via a nonrebreather mask
  • Bag-valve-mask (BVM) ventilation with 100 O2 and
    intubation for life-threatening conditions
  • Monitor patient response

51
Primary Survey
  • Circulation Check central pulse (peripheral
    pulses may be absent because of injury or
    vasoconstriction)
  • Assess skin for color, temperature, moisture
  • Assess mental status and capillary refill
  • Insert two large-bore IV catheters
  • Initiate aggressive fluid resuscitation using
    normal saline or lactated Ringers

52
Primary Survey
  • Disability Measured by patients level of
    consciousness
  • AVPU
  • A alert
  • V responsive to voice
  • P responsive to pain
  • U unresponsive
  • Glasgow Coma Scale Assess arousal aspect of
    patients consciousness (EVM) Note
  • Pupils Size, shape, response to light, equality

53
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54
Secondary Survey
  • Definition Brief, systematic process to identify
    all injuries after key life threats identified
    and treated
  • Exposure/Environmental control
  • Remove clothing
  • Provide temperature controlavoid hypothermia

55
Secondary Survey
  • Full set of vital signs
  • Blood pressure (bilateral)
  • Heart rate
  • Respiratory rate
  • Temperature (rectal)

56
Secondary Survey
  • Five interventions
  • Initiate ECG/EKG monitoring
  • Initiate pulse oximetry
  • Insert indwelling catheter
  • Insert orogastric/nasogastric tube
  • Collect blood for laboratory studies

57
Secondary Survey
  • Facilitate Family presence
  • Supported family members during invasive
    procedures or resuscitation Allow family in the
    room when resuscitation is happening. Have a
    staff member at their side explaining what is
    happening.
  • Give comfort measures
  • Pain management measures

58
Secondary Survey
  • History and Head-to-toe assessment
  • Obtain history of event, illness, injury from
    patient, family, and emergency personnel
  • AMPLE
  • Allergies, Meds, Past health, Last meal, Events
  • Perform head-to-toe assessment to obtain
    information about all other body systems

59
Secondary Survey
  • Head-to-toe assessment
  • Gently palpate with palms check
  • Head and spine look for blood/CSF - stabilize
  • Chest
  • Listen to abdomen first - OR
  • Pelvis (avoid rocking)
  • Check perineum
  • Limbs reduce fractures

60
Secondary Survey
  • Inspect the posterior surfaces
  • Logroll patient (while maintaining cervical spine
    immobilization) to inspect the posterior surfaces
  • Ecchymoses, wounds, deformities, spine alignment,
    pain, rectal exam for tone and blood
  • Warm patient warm IV fluids

61
Secondary Survey
  • Evaluate need for tetanus prophylaxis
  • Provide ongoing monitoring and evaluate patients
    response to interventions
  • Prepare to
  • Transport for diagnostic tests (e.g., x-ray)
  • Admit to general unit, telemetry, or intensive
    care unit
  • Transfer to another facility

62
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