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Difficulty cathing an obese or elderly patient---unable to find urinary meatus?
Need bedpan and sterile Q tips:
If client's legs excessively stiff--perform ROM first.
Turn a bedpan upside down, lightly powder bottom side and slide to back of buttocks--skinfolds will hang on the sides now. Drap client for cath insertion as usual. If having difficulty visualizing correct "hole" er meatus, I clean pubic area then insert sterile Qtip into skin opening to see if I can express urine while holding penlight in my lips. Saves on contaminating a catheter.
If difficulty recathing patient, I insert sterile Q tip prior to removing old indwelling catheter.
Dang...those are some GREAT tips!!!!!
I never knew that about the ativan...and the TED hose thing is brilliant!!! I do powder the bedpan...makes it much more comfortable for the patient!
Since we don't use pumps for out G-Tube feeders...I always fill the tubing with whater before adding the 2-cal, jevity, osmolite...etc. That stuff is ALOT thicker than it looks!!!
Although I have never had the need to do this, I once saw a Dr put his stethescope in the ears of a VERY hard of hearing patient while he talked into the bell...he didn't have to talk very loud and the patient heard him MUCH better!
And...when dealing with difficult/feisty patients...always remember...Approach...Approach...Approach!!! I wish I could get my co-workers to realize this.
Shari
I did not mean to forget you Karen...I will remember thos tips as well...catheterizing some patients can be EXTREMELY difficult. I have almost had to stand on my head to get some!!!!
Heelsticks on babies: Warm the heel--use an official heel warmer, or run 1/2 a diaper under warm [not hot] water and wrap it around the babies heel. Just before the puncture put a VERY thin film of Neosporin oint over the heel--makes the blood sort of bead up and go where you want it instead of running all over everything else.
We use the q-tip trick on babies, too, to spread the labia so that you can see the meatus. It takes a helper, but it's worth it.
moonshadeau, ADN, BSN, MSN, RN, APN, NP, CNS
521 Posts
I was surfing the web and came across this web site
http://nursing.about.com/gi/dynamic/offsite.htm?site=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.postgradmed.com%2Fpearls.htm
It is mostly related to doctors but there are some good nursing tips... But I know that all of you experienced nurses have learned something about some tip or trick that you didn't learn in nursing school but now is a no fail tip
I know that one tip I have is for blood. Check component, blood band, patient name, order, and check with patient if they have ever had a blood reaction before. This has saved me from having to call the doctor after I had the transfusion reaction. I just called before I gave the blood to get some prophalaxis.
Another one that I know works is to put powder on the bed pan.
any others out there