Port a Cath ?'s

Nurses General Nursing

Published

I am doing a home infusion tomorrow where the client has a port a cath. I have done port a caths in the past....I always check for blood return.

Apparently the case I am going on tomorrow uses 50ml bags to flush. That is no problem, but how do I check for blood return. I can't! I called my boss and she said it is not needed to check for blood return. But, isn't it? I thought that was a must with port a caths.

The policy and procedures are a little fuzzy with this company I work for. There is no p/p book for me to refer to and everytime I ask to get it printed off they always seem to forget. It is really driving me nuts.

Thanks for you help!

Um, well... won't you be accessing with your huber needle attached to a ns filled syringe?

Exactly! That is what I said!!! I think my boss hooked it up to the 50ml bag!

LMAO... (not really) but I was wondering what the heck did I not know! I was waiting to see what somebody else posted :)

Specializes in Oncology/Hematology.

every time I access a port-a-cath I check for a blood return prior to infusing a med. It's needed to verify placement. Although I work in an inpatient setting rather than homecare...I'm not sure if there are differences?

Specializes in Med/Surg/Tele/Onc.

Does the bag have a Y-site? When we infuse chemo, IV push, we usually have a free flowing bag of NS and push the chemo through a Y site. We check for blood return every 2-3 minutes of the push.

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