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Basically, pick a stethoscope that costs between about $25 and $75 and you'll likely have a stethoscope that should be sufficiently good enough to get you through school and into your practice afterward. All the ones that TheCommuter listed are good. Pick one and go for it! The cheap stethoscopes just don't isolate sound or transmit it well to the earpieces (and therefore your ears). They will do the job but they aren't all that good, as you have noticed.
I love my Littman....got it back when I started school. It was a little over $100, but prices may dropped by now. I also find it easier for me to hear with larger soft tip ear buds. The only time I really had a hard time hearing is when I inspected my ear buds and one had a tiny rip in it. Once I replaced the buds, it was as good as new.
I bought mines at allheart.com, got the se stethoscope, it's way cheaper online.. The quality is great!! I know what you mean of the cheap quality one the school provides.. Also think of it as an investment to your education and side note advice.. Get your name engraved on it or a color no one has cause I've gotta one stolen :)
Try making sure your stethoscope eartips are pointed forward, to the tip of your nose. If they aren't and are pointed straight in or backwards (and that's the way they all do it on TV and it makes me laugh every time I see it) the openings in them will be up against the wall of your ear canals, and you will hear nothing at all. Ear canals run back-to-front, not straight in. Number one cause of failure to be able to learn how to take BPs and hear heart, lung, and bowel sounds.
One more thought...
An easy way to amplify the sound quality of a cheapie stethoscope is to remove the diaphragm piece from the tubing, cut approximately three to five inches of the tubing, then reinsert the diaphragm piece into the newly shortened tubing.
People often notice they are able to hear better once the stethoscope tubing is not as long. However, I would only mutilate a cheapie stethoscope. I would never cut a more expensive stethoscope.
The sprague stethoscope work best for me because they have the double-tubing. I have a slight hearing problem and that stethoscope, which was only about $25, works better than the expensive ones I have tried in the past. I would love to have one with a microphone inside, but those are $$ and most of my patients are on isolation, so there would be no point most of the time.
After hearing so much hype about Littmann products, I am so glad another person has stepped forward to vouch for the utility of a Sprague Rappoport stethoscope. The $25 one spends on this stethoscope will be a good investment for years to come.The sprague stethoscope work best for me because they have the double-tubing.
future_nurse11
24 Posts
Okay.. I'm over exaggerating. I can hear with the stethoscope that my school provided to me BUT everything sounds very faint.. Especially bowel & lung sounds. I was told that a cardiology stethoscope would give more amplification. I don't really want to pay a couple hundred for a stethoscope but at the same time I do want something that provides stronger, clearer sounds. Any recommendations? Something with quality that costs a reasonable amount?