I worked the evening shift yesterday and as I was coming back from a sandwich shop getting my 'lunch', I walked smack into someone seizing on the floor of the lobby. There was someone holding his head in her lap as his leg were jerking all around and I just heard the code RRT being paged so I ran to the front desk and threw my wallet and sandwich down. As I was turning to go assist the receptionist gave me an alcohol pad and told me to place it under his nose. I went walking over to him very quickly and heard the security guard say, 'It's okay, she's a nurse!'. I had time to yell out, 'No, I'm a tech!', before I reached this person with the alcohol pad and fanned it under his nose. To my amazement, he stopped seizing. I knelt next to him and secured his free arm while his friend cuddled his head and observed phlegm coming out of the corner of his nose.
I wish I can say that I took his pulse and turned him on his side but I did none of that and after another call for the RRT, I finally saw one lone Dr. walking quickly towards us. He asked for O2, I pointed to a wheelchair by the door, he approached the pt, observed the phlegm and hesitated. I asked him what he needed me to do, he said he needs suction and to go get it. So I'm up and hurrying to the ER, which is about 50 ft away, and then I think, the suction comes from the wall! I grab a stretcher and sheet instead and by the time I got back the rest of the team was there.
In retrospect, I wish I had been able to think more clearly and at least turn him on his side but it didn't even cross my mind. However my question is this? Why did the alcohol under his nose stop the convulsions? More importantly, why did the receptionist know this and I as a Tech didn't? I've tried searching on the internet to no avail and when I got back to my unit, a Dr. said that if the seizure was related to alcohol withdrawal, then maybe the smell of the alcohol..............?
I can't remeber what else he said but can anyone clarify?
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I worked the evening shift yesterday and as I was coming back from a sandwich shop getting my 'lunch', I walked smack into someone seizing on the floor of the lobby. There was someone holding his head in her lap as his leg were jerking all around and I just heard the code RRT being paged so I ran to the front desk and threw my wallet and sandwich down. As I was turning to go assist the receptionist gave me an alcohol pad and told me to place it under his nose. I went walking over to him very quickly and heard the security guard say, 'It's okay, she's a nurse!'. I had time to yell out, 'No, I'm a tech!', before I reached this person with the alcohol pad and fanned it under his nose. To my amazement, he stopped seizing. I knelt next to him and secured his free arm while his friend cuddled his head and observed phlegm coming out of the corner of his nose.
I wish I can say that I took his pulse and turned him on his side but I did none of that and after another call for the RRT, I finally saw one lone Dr. walking quickly towards us. He asked for O2, I pointed to a wheelchair by the door, he approached the pt, observed the phlegm and hesitated. I asked him what he needed me to do, he said he needs suction and to go get it. So I'm up and hurrying to the ER, which is about 50 ft away, and then I think, the suction comes from the wall!
I grab a stretcher and sheet instead and by the time I got back the rest of the team was there.
In retrospect, I wish I had been able to think more clearly and at least turn him on his side but it didn't even cross my mind. However my question is this? Why did the alcohol under his nose stop the convulsions? More importantly, why did the receptionist know this and I as a Tech didn't?
I've tried searching on the internet to no avail and when I got back to my unit, a Dr. said that if the seizure was related to alcohol withdrawal, then maybe the smell of the alcohol..............?
I can't remeber what else he said but can anyone clarify?