Re: pacu preceptor
In PACU, we always say ABCs! LOL, but it's true. When the OR circulator and anesthesiologist/CRNA brings you a patient, start hooking them up to the monitors while they are giving report. Always look at the patient's chest for breathing! Look at how they are moving air, is the patient obstructing. This comes before anything else! Someone once told me that the #1 cause of lawsuits from PACU are airway/sedation issues. Sometimes the patient hasn't blown off the gas yet or there is still a little paralytic hanging around and I've had patients brought out either obstructing or apneic.
If the patient is obstructing, hold the airway open by chin tilt or jaw thrust. Usually the patient will have an oral airway or nasal trumpet to help out. If the patient comes out intubated or with an LMA know what the hospital's policy is on extubation. For example, holds head up x5 secs, follows commands, hemodynamically stable. Always make sure there is suction handy.
Make sure you know the most common drugs, like anti-hypertensives, narcotics, sedative, reveral agents, paralytics, vasoactives, antiemetics. For example: Labetalol, Hydralazine, Morphine, Dilaudid, Demerol, Versed, Valium, Robinol, Narcan, Romazicon, Anectine, Phenylephrine, Phenergan, Zofran. Reviewing ACLS will help.
In PACU it's usually pretty fast paced, once the patient can maintain an airway, is reactive, VSS, pain controlled (not necessarily totally relieved), and isn't having bleeding/complications, call report and send them on their way.
Make sure you review the orders for anything that is to be done in PACU, like labs or meds.
HTH. Good luck!
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