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- Jan 19, 2011
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- Attending Physician
walked into a crna bagging a patient on the floor just before attempting intubation.
BOOM!
?what the hell was that?
oh nothing, just the colostomy bag exploding.
sheets on the bed saved us. a mental note was made....
sheets on the bed saved us. a mental note was made....
On call responded to a trauma code in ER resuc bay. 7 yo F s/p vehicle vs. pedestrian. RT was bagging the patient a liter at a time full force. I yelled at her to stop when I got there but I was to late, pt aspirated some very nasty stuff. Stomach was literally popping out of the rib cage. Immediately suctioned and secured tube. Pt subsequently developed ARDS. 2 weeks later on a vent in ICU she thankfully made a full recovery. RT didn't think she did anything wrong. To this day I am very weary of anyone other than anesthesiologist bagging pts.
From bagging? Really? It would take some serious force to get air in the hind gut. I'm suspicious that aggressive BMV could cause this. Gastric and duo sure. Colon or ileum, not buying it.
Side note. When I'm bagging a patient during a code or respiratory embarrassment and they have a g-tube I ask someone to connect it to a foley bag.
On the iPhone
I was called to an airway in the ICU once. When I showed up there were 2 RTs "bagging" the patient. Sats were 34% (obviously that's not going to be accurate, but the dude was blue). They told me he was impossible to ventilate. I took over and sats were 97% within a minute. Amazing what happens when you lift the mandible, rather than smashing the mask onto the face.This is why the dumbing down of ACLS hurts patients. Never, never have I seen effective BMV in progress when I have been summoned to intervene.
I was called to an airway in the ICU once. When I showed up there were 2 RTs "bagging" the patient. Sats were 34% (obviously that's not going to be accurate, but the dude was blue). They told me he was impossible to ventilate. I took over and sats were 97% within a minute. Amazing what happens when you lift the mandible, rather than smashing the mask onto the face.
It's a scary, scary world out there.
walked into a crna bagging a patient on the floor just before attempting intubation.
BOOM!
?what the hell was that?
oh nothing, just the colostomy bag exploding.
sheets on the bed saved us. a mental note was made....

walked into a crna bagging a patient on the floor just before attempting intubation.
BOOM!
?what the hell was that?
oh nothing, just the colostomy bag exploding.
sheets on the bed saved us. a mental note was made....

😆😆In the future if someone is doing something wrong, clearly wrong, and potentially harmful, if they don't heed your suggestion for appropriate action then you need to relieve them. As in, GTFO of my way *****, go review respiratory physiology and then come back and we'll talk. You're the physician, they're the technician. Try to be very concrete, like "hey RT person, ventilate at an appropriate tidal volume at a rate of 15, that's one breath every 4 seconds, with a 1 to 2 I to E time." That's an order they are obligated to follow. Don't let people F up when you know they're Fing up. And if they give you BS about accuracy, etc, correct that as well. This person will continue to be a pathetic excuse of an RT because she still thinks she was right, and she obviously was not.
Cheers!
In the future if someone is doing something wrong, clearly wrong, and potentially harmful, if they don't heed your suggestion for appropriate action then you need to relieve them. As in, GTFO of my way *****, go review respiratory physiology and then come back and we'll talk. You're the physician, they're the technician. Try to be very concrete, like "hey RT person, ventilate at an appropriate tidal volume at a rate of 15, that's one breath every 4 seconds, with a 1 to 2 I to E time." That's an order they are obligated to follow. Don't let people F up when you know they're Fing up. And if they give you BS about accuracy, etc, correct that as well. This person will continue to be a pathetic excuse of an RT because she still thinks she was right, and she obviously was not.
Cheers!
Surgery chief resident here:
I'm no airway expert, but being the one who is stuck dealing with the sequelae of aspiration and poor ventilation has made me very aware of this problem.
I have to say though if I am there because it's my patient or what have you and RT it ICU fellow medicine code person is bagging inappropriately, I politely but firmly make sure they change.
The irony here is I would gladly correct another resident/attending if something was improperly being done. We all have mutual respect for each other and understand the vast knowledge we possess from our respected specialties.
Classic example: last week about to intubate patient and surgery resident tells me: "hey just a heads up I would probably RSI this patient, they have been NPO for 24 hours but they been going through opiates like candy and vomited quite a bit the day prior". I respectfully agreed, never argued, never once thought how dare he questioned my airway technique. RSI'ed the patient and sure enough after OG suction got a good 100 cc of junk.
When I correct another resident on improper technique specific to my specialty, they readily agree because of the mutual respect. As physicians we have humility because we know there are somethings we simply don't know. Its these select egotistical nurse/ RT/midlevel a*holes who don't know what they don't know. And because they don't know, they think they're right and patients suffer. Trying to correct them almost always ends in some type of useless argument or getting written up. I am convinced, most of them actually enjoy it.