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We were taught to pinch the skin, inject the needle, push the plunger (slowly) and release the skin and pull out the needle at the same time. Releasing the skin right after injection will move the placement of the needle.
We were taught that way too and it wouldn't make sense to pinch then let it go and inject because then what would the point be of pinching anyhow.
Not sure if this applies to heparin, but I thought I'd throw it out there because maybe it would apply. I'm still a beginning student. I have diabetic children who take insulin sq regularly and one of my boys has problems with leaking insulin. If he isn't rotating his sites well the insulin will leak from the site because it doesn't absorb well from areas that have been overused.
No it wasnt prefilled...we draw up our own.... If the bubble wasn't there might that be the problem?
We had pre-filled which had a bubble at the top that we were to keep in the syringe...it had something to do with 'sealing it'...
I just did a quick google and found this-
https://patienteducation.osumc.edu/Documents/LovenoxSubq.pdf
Hope it helps :)
nurse2b013
112 Posts
Hello! Today I gave two separate heparin injections, both in the pt.'s abdomen. I pinched the skin and punctured the skin, released the pinched skin and pushed the plunger. Both times as I was pushing the plunger, the heparin flowed right back out and all over the pt.'s abdomen. My preceptor wasn't sure why, other than maybe the needle had become loose. I'm really stressing over this now...is it something in my technique? I've given many heparin injections before, but it's been a while. I've never experienced this before. Please help!!! Thank you!