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Page 1: Emergency Room

Emergency Room

Yi Ping Zhao

Department of Vascular SurgeryRen Ji Hospital

Page 2: Emergency Room

How Emergency Rooms Work

Page 3: Emergency Room

You will learn about

• the normal flow of traffic in an emergency room

• the people involved

• the special techniques used to respond to life-or-death situations

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Emergency Room Patients

• Car accidents • Sports injuries • Broken bones and cuts from accidents and falls • Burns • Uncontrolled bleeding • Heart attacks, chest pain • Difficulty breathing, asthma attacks, pneumonia • Strokes, loss of function and/or numbness in arms or legs • Loss of vision, hearing • Unconsciousness

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Emergency Room Patients

• Confusion, altered level of consciousness, fainting • Suicidal or homicidal thoughts • Overdoses • Severe abdominal pain, persistent vomiting • Food poisoning • Blood when vomiting, coughing, urinating, or in bowel

movements • Severe allergic reactions from insect bites, foods or

medications • Complications from diseases, high fevers

Page 6: Emergency Room

Understanding the ER Maze

• The classic emergency room scene involves an ambulance screeching to a halt, a gurney hurtling through the hallway and some people frantically working to save a person's life with only seconds to spare.

• This does happen and is not uncommon, • The majority of cases seen in a typical

emergency department aren't quite this dramatic.

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Triage

When you arrive at the ER, your first stop is triage. This is the place where each patient's condition is prioritized into three general categories:

• Immediately life threatening • Urgent, but not immediately life

threatening • Less urgent

Page 8: Emergency Room

Triage

The triage nurse records patients vital signs (temperature, pulse, respiratory rate and blood pressure).

She also gets a brief history of patients current medical complaints, past medical problems, medications and allergies.

Page 9: Emergency Room

Registration

• This step is necessary to develop a medical record so that patients medical history, lab tests, X-rays, etc., will all be located on one chart that can be referenced at any time.

• If the patient's condition is life-threatening or if the patient arrives by ambulance, this step may be completed later at the bedside.

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Examination Room

• Patients are seen by an ER nurse who obtains more detailed information about patients.

• Once the nurse has finished her tasks, the next visitor is an ER physician. He gets a more detailed medical history about your present illness, past medical problems, family history, social history, and a complete review of all your body systems. He then formulates a list of possible causes of your symptoms.

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Diagnostic Tests

Blood tests and a urinalysis are required.

• A complete blood count (CBC)     

• A serum test

• A blood's clotting test

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Diagnosis and Treatment

• When the emergency physician has all the information he can obtain, he makes a determination of the most likely diagnosis from his differential diagnosis.

• Alternately, he may decide that he does not have enough information to make a decision and may require more tests. At this point, appropriate consultant is needed.

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The ER team

• Emergency Physician

• Emergency Nurse

• Physician Assistant

• Emergency Department Technician

• Unit Secretary

• Physicians in Training

Page 14: Emergency Room

Tools of the Trade

• Emergency Departments are stocked with a huge array of strangely named, oddly shaped, beeping and blinking equipment.

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Stethoscope

• A stethoscope lets a nurse or physician listen to heart and respiratory sounds.

• A stethoscope is used to take your blood pressure by listening to the flow of blood through your arteries.

Page 16: Emergency Room

Cardiac Monitor

• A cardiac monitor gives a visual display of the rhythm of patients heart.

• Some monitors also have an automatic blood pressure cuff and a pulse oximeter.

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Suture Tray

This tray contains the sterile equipment needed to place stitches in a patient with a laceration.

• needle holder • forceps • sterile towels • scissors• small bowls

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Orthopedic Equipment • Most emergency departments have a generous

number of orthopedic devices for many purposes

• plaster and/or fiberglass materials • pre-made splints for specific joints

– knee immobilizers– aluminum finger splints– Velcro wrist splints– shoulder slings– cervical collars

• cast cutters

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Crash Cart

A crash cart is a cabinet containing equipment that physicians and nurses need when a cardiac arrest occurs. – Defibrillator – Endotracheal intubation

equipment – Central vein catheters – Cardiac drugs

Page 20: Emergency Room

Defibrillator

Page 21: Emergency Room

Tools used in endotracheal intubation


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