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izzy's playlists!
noise dept.
occasionally subtle
One Nice Bug Per Day
Peter Solarz

Kaledo Art
cherry valley forever

blake kathryn

oozey mess
DEAR READER
Claire Keane
ojovivo
RMH
KIROKAZE
Show & Tell
Misplaced Lens Cap
Sweet Seals For You, Always
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me

Andulka

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣

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@rnfromemt
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Credit: @ThinkAnneThink
Lol who’s getting PPE like that NOT US HERE IN NY HOW ARE YA
executive dysfunction be like
me: okay, it’s time to do the thing
brain: we have to wait
me: wait for what?
brain: something
me: what though?
brain: we just have to wait
me: okay, but why?
brain: we have to wait
me: wait for WHAT
brain: i dunno but it’s something
So giving her a liter bolus will kill her. It's ordered but it's a bad idea. I won't be hanging that, did you have another idea?
An RN, talking on the phone to an MD
Real Life USMLE Question
Wayfaring: Wow, your blood pressure is still pretty high.
Patient (who is Austrian): Ja, Ja, I don’t know why is all of a sudden going higher but it is better today. Last week it was higher.
Wayfaring: Has your diet changed? Do you eat a lot of salty food?
Patient: No, maybe little more since coming to US but not a lot.
Wayfaring: I’m going to increase your blood pressure medication to this.
[later during encounter]
Patient: So I was eating a lot of - I don’t know how you say but it is black candy? We call lakritz? And it made my stomach hurt so I quit a few days ago.
Wayfaring: Wait, LICORICE?
Patient: Ja, you know it?
Wayfaring: How much licorice?
Patient: A LOT. I really like it.
Wayfaring: It’s the licorice!! I never thought I’d have to know that piece of information from medical school!
Patient:
Wayfaring: Your blood pressure! You gotta cut back the licorice. It’s raising your blood pressure!
Patient: Is zis a real thing?
Wayfaring: Yeah! It was on my board exams! But I never thought I’d need to know it in real life.
In an exclusive interview, Catherine Montantes’s mother details her daughter’s death from measles, a disease called ‘harmless’ by anti-vaxxers
Catherine Montantes was a 28-year-old college student, training to become a border patrol agent, and recently diagnosed with an autoimmune disorder.
When she stepped into the Lower Elwha tribal health clinic in Port Angeles, Washington, she had no idea she arrived just an hour after a 52-year-old infected with measles. The virus is one of the most contagious and can live on infected surfaces for up to two hours.
Despite being vaccinated against measles, Montantes was killed less than three months later by the disease, because her immune system was suppressed by medication to control the autoimmune disorder dermatomyositis.
Her death, on 8 April 2015, became the last recorded death from measles in the United States. At the time, no one had perished from measles in 12 years. Now, as a record-setting measles outbreak spreads in 28 states, with the majority of cases in New York, her death shows how preventable diseases can devastate families far outside the communities which choose to delay or decline vaccines.
NFTI Scoring Revisited - Not Just For Triage Calculations?
Earlier this week, I wrote about a new tool for monitoring over- and under-triage for trauma programs. In place of using ISS as the metric for triggering review, the Need For Trauma Intervention (NFTI) is based on resource utilization during the initial portion of the hospital stay.
The original study was performed at a single Level I trauma center in Dallas. The authors then rolled it out as a multicenter study to test its overall reliability. However, the authors changed the focus in this work. The original paper focused on the development of a new tool to improve upon the evaluation of proper decisions to activate the trauma team. The authors have now extrapolated that their system predicts when a patient’s physiologic reserve is depleted. In turn, this should be the indicator that a trauma activation is needed.
The authors performed a convenience sample of 38 trauma centers around the US. Of these, 25 were adult only, 3, pediatric only, and 10 were combined adult/peds centers. Two years of data were collected from each. Injury severity score (ISS) and revised trauma score (RTS) were calculated for all patients. Outcomes analyzed were discharge location (home vs ongoing care), complications, and length of stay.
A complicated statistical model was adopted that evaluated the associations between higher ISS (> 15), lower RTS (< 7.84) and any positive NFTI factor. To refresh your memory, here’s the list of NFTI factors:
blood transfusion within 4 hours of arrival
discharge from ED to OR within 90 minutes of arrival
discharge from ED to interventional radiology (IR)
discharge from ED to ICU AND ICU length of stay at least 3 days
require mechanical ventilation during the first 3 days, excluding anesthesia
death within 60 hours of arrival
Here are the factoids regarding the new study:
Nearly 90,000 patient encounters were submitted over a 2 year period
The risk of experiencing a complication increased by 9x if NFTI+, 6x for ISS>15, and 5x for RTS<7.84
Odds of discharge to a continuing care facility was about 2.5x more likely if any of the three thresholds were met
Length of stay was significantly better predicted by NFTI
The authors conclude that NFTI was a better indicator of major trauma when compared to ISS and RTS. They claim that it is the best single definition because the model fit is better and that it has stronger associations with complications, discharge location, and length of stay.
Bottom line: Hmm, I’m not so sure. It’s a great idea and does allow us to drill down on those patients most in need of high-level trauma center resources. The authors admit that each tool (ISS, RTS, and NFTI) identifies some important patients that the others do not. It just seems that more of them tend to be identified by NFTI.
I always worry when complicated statistical models are needed to show these differences. This is a complex concept, so more sophisticated models may indeed be needed by virtue of the data that needs to be analyzed. Overtriage can be easily identified in many cases when NFTI- patients trigger a full trauma activation. Obvious undertriage occurs in NFTI+ patients with no activation.
But NFTI still does not obviate the need to search harder for undertriage. What about the case of a stab to the chest in the “box” region, who does not end up with a cardiac injury or hemo/pneumothorax? They would be NFTI- but mechanism positive.
How do we learn from NFTI+ patients who did not have a trauma activation. Just like using the Cribari grid, we must look at each individual chart and ask two questions:
Did this patient meet any of our highest level activation criteria? If so, it is frank undertriage.
If not, do we need a new criterion to catch this in the future?
So NFTI is a somewhat improved version of the Cribari grid. Sure, it can predict complications better, as well as length of stay (which may be related). But not discharge location, as claimed. As for being an indicator of depleted patient reserve, I think that’s just speculation at this point. Both tools can be used to automatically generate data for review from the trauma registry. And both will have some false negatives and positives.
My recommendation: This paper provides an academic argument that NFTI is somewhat better than the Cribari method. Now it’s time to get practical. Some enterprising trauma centers need to do a study where they use both systems side by side. How many charts for review are generated by each? How many false negatives and positives are there? How much work (abstractor / registrar time) is needed to analyze and act on the results? This is the only way we can answer the question of which one is better in the real world.
Reference: Rethinking the definition of major trauma: The Need For Trauma Intervention outperforms Injury Severity Score and Revised Trauma Score in 38 adult and pediatric trauma centers. J Trauma publish ahead of print, 2019.
Source: https://thetraumapro.com/?p=4757
u lie down and its like (• ) ( •) and thats just how it is
You lie on your side and it’s just (•)(• )
what kind of eyes do y’all have
#Repost @the_resuscitationist ・・・ @specialforcesmedics original picture . Not a photoshopped image. No filter or editing. . BATTLE SIGN: mastoid ecchyimosis (bruising) indicitive of a posterior skull fracture “basilar skull fracture”. Also may see RACCOON EYES (periorbital bruising). . One of those clinical signs thats a must know. The bruising is caused after blood “creeps” or extravasation around the posterior auricular artery. There may be a CSF leak out the nose or ears.. Text books read “HALO RING SIGN” after that fluid is dried on a piece of guaze/paper and shows an outer clear ring. . These need CT imaging. Do not assume is just spreading bruising or a mandiublar condyle fracture (less serious). Consult with neurosurg and discuss antibiotic prophylaxis if open fracture, overlying laceration, sinus involvement and a few other situations. . ***What other SIGNS in trauma can you think of??? . . #trauma #brain #head #bruising #violence #doctor #medic #doc #physian #rn #nurse #nursepractitioner #physiciansassistant #pa #ems #emt #combatmedic #68w #army #emergency #battle #sign #neuro #neurology #ear #skull #fracture https://www.instagram.com/p/BzQh7t3BfQO/?igshid=lcmm7dl63dwi
Insulin costs like $5 to make. This is murder.
“Insulin has become so expensive…” Insulin doesn’t “become” expensive. Three pharma companies set the price: Eli Lilly, Novo Nordisk, and Sanofi. Their CEOs are: David A. Ricks ($16m/year), Lars F. Jørgensen ($3.5m/year), Olivier Brandicourt ($11.8m/year).
This. Is. Murder.
My brother works for Eli Lilly, he has told me countless times that the company offers free insulin if you qualify for their program. I’m providing the link below.
https://www.lillycares.com
Find your name with the gif button and add the one that is the most relatable
Originally posted by hechosastrologicos
This was… the only gif
The only one for my name…
Only 4 gifs showed up 🤷🏼♀️
Works as I’m smoking cigars with my dad lol
There were only 3 that came up...
It’s funny that we use skeletons as symbols of core human anatomy when our bones are just the scaffolding for something else.
behold
a human without its suit or fuel system
autonomous spagetts
That comment killed me
Robert Hays, “Airplane!” (Zucker-Abrahams-Zucker, 1980).
Me studying for the NCLEX
WHEN SOMEONE SAYS THAT IT’S A QUIET NIGHT