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Tomorrow we get to practice drawing blood for the first time. We're practicing on each other, and I'm kind of nervous. What were you're first experiences drawing blood like?
Tomorrow we get to practice drawing blood for the first time. We're practicing on each other, and I'm kind of nervous. What were you're first experiences drawing blood like?
we're doing this soon too! i'm scared of needles. i can't even watch my own blood being drawn. surgeries don't bother me, but needles......oh god i'm cringing now. i hate hate hate hate needles. and i have a very low pain threshold. basically, i'm a terrible patient.
can you tell i'm a bit freaked out about this?
..and the higher the measured K+ will be - one of the biggest sources of preanalytical variation (especially for K+) in lab values is the tourniquet + fist clenching effect......the tighter you tie the tourniquet, the less likely they are to jump when you stick them. Because they can't feel it.
Learn the basics but don't worry too much about it. You can be a GREAT doctor and have no idea how to draw blood.*
It is a job for techs and nurses, you're in med school to learn to think, interpret, and plan. I guarantee you that you will never be graded on your skill or lack thereof in drawing blood.
*unless you want to be an anesthesiologist
Well, my blood drawing session is over with, and it was really no big deal! 🙂 They had everybody use butterfly needles. The most "complicated" part was getting everything organized before hand!
Are you an M2? Just curious because I'm an M2 as well, and I haven't seen any blood drawing on the schedule for our clinical skills classes, so I was wondering if our schedule's dramatically different from a bunch of other school.s
..and the higher the measured K+ will be - one of the biggest sources of preanalytical variation (especially for K+) in lab values is the tourniquet + fist clenching effect.
It's easy if u do it by the book!!!!! If u don't now the procedure don't try it!!! Remember "PRIMUM NON NOCERE" = First do no harm!!!!! 🙂
Quote of the summer from the ED re: an unconscious frequent flyer:To those who are strong advocates of butterflies: the majority of accidental sticks come from those rather than syringes or vacutainers. Also, I advocate using the largest needle you think the patient (and vein) can tolerate. There potential for hemolysis goes up the smaller the needle is. If the patient's a hard stick, you don't want to be going back to explain that they can't run the blood b/c you grossly hemolyzed it. Drawing blood is only 'easy' on the young and healthy. Your heroin addict and your chemo patient are different stories. The heroin addict can usually tell you where his/her remaining vein is though.
Learn the basics but don't worry too much about it. You can be a GREAT doctor and have no idea how to draw blood.*
It is a job for techs and nurses, you're in med school to learn to think, interpret, and plan. I guarantee you that you will never be graded on your skill or lack thereof in drawing blood.
*unless you want to be an anesthesiologist
I'm a wimp I guess, but I would really, really not want other students to practice drawing blood on me. I've got good veins, but they're deep, and they roll. I'm thinking a practice session with a person who has no clue what they're doing would be pretty d@mn painful. Hopefully, my school doesn't require us to practice on each other.![]()
Ouch! I much prefer when they just take the needle out and try again. I don't have easy veins and it is so painful when they fish around for it.Not sure if anyone mentioned this:
Do NOT remove the needle and try again if you miss. This will cause even more pain. At all costs, stay in the arm until u're sure that there is no possible way you can enter the vein. You can feel for teh vein lightly to see how far off you are, then pull out slightly w/o coming out of skin and make a nice sharp turn. I've done 90 degree turns to enter a vein I missed the first time w/o pulling out. The majority of the pain in a stick is really from just breaking the skin and nothing else. And you can impress some people who think you missed by doing this sometimes =).
And if you're doing the back of the hands, don't do what I did first time. Make sure u hold the skin in front AND in back taut, because otherwise u'll stick and the skin will fold before u've entered, leaving the pt w/ pain and no possible way of getting the stick that time. Screwed up an IV on a kid that way twice before the resident took over and showed me how to do it right.
It may be true that as a doctor drawing blood isnt your main prerogative, however at the hospital that I work at, when the techs and nurses cant get the blood the house doctor has to be called. So its pretty important to be able to draw blood.
However, practice definitely makes perfect when it comes to phlebotomy. Practice feeling for veins and stick as many people as you can. And don't be skittish, if you miss its not that big of a deal. It hurts more if the needle is put in slowly...
That's why they instituted the H-index; sometimes, ones 'sins are covered over' and you can get a reliable result for several blood chemistries.Also leaving the tourniquet on too long before drawing the blood will cause this. If you miss, untie the tourniquet and let the blood flow before retying and trying again. Lab techs hate working with hemolyzed blood.
That's why they instituted the H-index; sometimes, ones 'sins are covered over' and you can get a reliable result for several blood chemistries.
From personal experience, most clinicians just want a number--as bad as that is--and the H-index often gets you that. Too bad most clinicians don't hear the conversations in core lab.Yes, but personal experience has taught me that the techs still complain. Unless, of course, they were thw ones that drew the sample.
Learn the basics but don't worry too much about it. You can be a GREAT doctor and have no idea how to draw blood.*
It is a job for techs and nurses, you're in med school to learn to think, interpret, and plan. I guarantee you that you will never be graded on your skill or lack thereof in drawing blood.
*unless you want to be an anesthesiologist
From personal experience, most clinicians just want a number--as bad as that is--and the H-index often gets you that. Too bad most clinicians don't hear the conversations in core lab.