Starting IVs on old sick people

Specialties Infusion

Published

Hey,

I've read tons of info on starting IVs and used to start them quite frequently a fews ago but now am having problems. Am working at a new job where we do our own IVs and not having good success. I have only tried on a few patients but the patients have been severely sick, old, with bad skin, and possibly in renal failure.

Two of the people have been sick old women, one with COPD. I tried to get the vein but the flash is none. I think i'm rolling it but I'm not sure. After I take the catheter out (a failed attempt) I look at the puncture whole is right over the vein, like I was in the right spot. I'm wondering....am I going to deep, are these veings in skinny old people a lot more superficial than I'm anticipating?

Any advice would be appreciated as I refuse to be one of those nurses who isn't good with IVs!!!

Z

Specializes in tele, stepdown/PCU, med/surg.

Thanks for all the tips. What do you mean "cause the vein to go flat?" Also, One more question. I notice when I apply a lot of tension under where I'm going to poke, the vein suddenly becomes flat and I lose my feeling of how deep to go etc or where exactly it is because it's flat. How do I keep it there to not roll yet still have a vein that's not obscured or flattened by my tension? THANKS!!!

Hi...student nurse here...I have read others sites where nurses were talking about using a penlight and/or venoscope when starting IV's. Can someone give me some insight on this. We are learning IV's this week and and tricks would be greatly appreciated. Thanks.

Really helpful information on venous access. Just what i needed. Many thanks! ~ kathy

Specializes in Peds Cardiology,Peds Neuro,Pedi ER,PICU, IV Jedi.
Thanks for all the tips. What do you mean "cause the vein to go flat?" Also, One more question. I notice when I apply a lot of tension under where I'm going to poke, the vein suddenly becomes flat and I lose my feeling of how deep to go etc or where exactly it is because it's flat. How do I keep it there to not roll yet still have a vein that's not obscured or flattened by my tension? THANKS!!!

To answer your question about the tension you apply - if the vein goes "flat" or you can't see it anymore, release some tension until you can see/palpate the vein again. In my experience, it's usually the "deep" veins that tend to roll anyway - not the superficial ones. If you release tension and still can't see/feel the vein, release the tourniquet and reapply after a minute or two - let the vein fill up with blood again.

Hope that helps.

vamedic4

Couldn't go outside today.

Specializes in 5th Semester - Graduation Dec '09!.

I am a nursing student but work as a phelbotomist in blood donation. I usually do over 30 sticks per day. We haven't started IVs in school yet, so I don't know how they train nurses. But-- I can tell you what I do.

Tie tourniquet *close* (not way up) to VP site and I ask the pt to clinch their fist to get the muscles to push the vein up. then feel the anticubital. If I don't get anything, sometimes I will try a BP cuff. Then I usually firmly rub from the wrist to the antecubital once or twice to help push blood up. If it's really being fussy, the warm compact trick works wonders!

Once I clean the area, retie the tourniquet, I ask them to make a fist again, and wait for it to come up. Secure the vein by tightening down the skin 2 inches distal of the antecubital-- stretch it down and hold it. This will help to keep it from rolling. "And a stick" bevel up. I usually go in from the top because I don't usually have problems, but sometimes I go from the side. Once you go in, if the hub inst flashing, stop and feel for the vein right above the VP site and use it as a guide, pull the needle back and use the vein as a guide and push back in. Sometime it wont flash, or it will flash and then disappear-- this doesnt mean that you arent in the vein! I would take the advice to flush with saline to see how it flows. Watch for infiltration in the area, which is a sure sign that you were unsuccessful.

I think that a problem that I had when I first started was that I didn't want to hurt anyone or I was nervous, so I would stick fast. Going in slowly is ok! It helps to keep you from going through the vein! When I first started I was having some problems, but I asked a coworker to watch me and give me some advice. It realy helped! If someone you work with a good stick, ask them if you can watch them or if they can give you any tips.

Good luck!

Specializes in Post Anesthesia.

Just a couple of tricks from an old nurse:

-never use a tourniquet! a BP cuff inflated to just above diastole will engorge the vein much better, and for difficult sticks when you have to hunt for a while, it is more comfortable for the patient;

- if the vein "blows" when you attempt the stick, or you get a flash but can't advance the catheter into the vein, invert your bevel before you stick. That way you won't get a blood flash until the catheter is in the lumen of the vein. It hurts a little more but you only have to stick once.

Tons of great new tricks for me to try out!

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