Emergency Nursing Made Incredibly Easy!
6.290 kr.

Lýsing:
Worried about handling the challenges of emergency nursing? Skillfully handle the daily demands of the emergency room, with the fully updated Emergency Nursing Made Incredibly Easy!®, 3rd Edition. Full of colorful illustrations, humor and friendly expert advice, this go-to reference offers solid, step-by-step guidance on the assessments, exams, tests and treatments involved in emergency, trauma and critical care — all in the enjoyable Incredibly Easy® style.
Annað
- Höfundar: Cherie R. Rebar, Carolyn J. Gersch, Nicole Heimgartner
- Útgáfa:3
- Útgáfudagur: 2019-09-09
- Hægt að prenta út 2 bls.
- Hægt að afrita 2 bls.
- Format:ePub
- ISBN 13: 9781975117498
- Print ISBN: 9781975117474
- ISBN 10: 1975117492
Efnisyfirlit
- 1 Emergency department basics
- What is emergency nursing?
- Meet the emergency nurse
- What do you do?
- Where do you work?
- What makes you special?
- Advocacy
- Stuck in the middle
- Clinical judgment
- Why be critical?
- Always asking questions
- Caring practice
- Collaboration
- Cultural diversity
- Keep an open mind
- Education
- Staff as students
- Becoming an emergency nurse
- Learning by doing
- Gaining credentials
- Help wanted
- Safety first
- What’s in it for me?
- Nursing responsibilities
- Assessment
- Planning
- What’s the problem?
- Implementation
- A call to intervene
- Evaluation
- Emergency essentials
- Information station
- Danger details
- Patient particulars
- Injuries sustained
- Vital vitals
- Systematic systems
- Primary survey
- A is for airway
- B is for breathing
- C is for circulation
- D is for disability
- E is for exposure and environment
- Secondary survey
- F is for family matters/full set of vital signs/focused adjuncts
- G for give comfort measures
- H is for history and head-to-toe assessment
- Triage
- Once divided
- Stay in touch
- Interprofessional teamwork
- The whole goal
- Team huddle
- Working with registered nurses
- The buddy system
- Working with doctors
- Working with advanced practice nurses
- The roles of a lifetime
- On a role
- Working with licensed practical nurses
- Working with respiratory therapists
- Respiration-related roles
- Clinical tools
- Clinical pathways
- Follow the path
- Tried and true
- Outlines and timelines
- Practice guidelines
- Let an expert be your guide
- The evidence is in
- Consider the source
- Protocols
- First things first
- Input from experts
- Transport
- Not so simple
- Interfacility transport
- ED on wheels (or wings)
- Movin’ out
- Cha-ching
- Intrafacility transport
- Movin’ in
- Communication
- All in the know
- Family matters
- Best practices
- Best for all concerned
- Emergency research
- Share and share alike
- Evidence-based care
- An evidence-based example
- First, last, and always
- Quick quiz
- Scoring
- Selected references
- 2 Holistic care
- What is holistic health care?
- A new dimension
- Holistic care issues
- Patient and family issues
- Family ties
- Slipping on emotional turmoil
- Circle out of round
- Unprepared for the worst
- Lend a hand
- Lend an ear, too
- Because you asked
- Living with the decision
- Cultural considerations
- Consider culture
- Cognitive issues
- Fair to compare
- It’s a factor
- Invasion of personal space
- Medications
- Pain control issues
- Help is at hand
- Don’t be fooled
- Choose a tool
- Silent suffering
- Body and mind
- Pain particulars
- Pharmacologic pain management
- Nonpharmacologic pain management
- Sensory input
- Too much or too little
- Ethical issues
- The value of values
- Code of ethics
- Unsolvable mysteries
- A question of quality
- Consulting the committee
- Who decides?
- Where there’s a will, there’s a law
- It takes two
- Standards deviation
- Donations accepted
- Quick quiz
- Scoring
- Selected references
- 3 Neurologic emergencies
- Understanding neurologic emergencies
- Assessment
- Check the records
- History
- Friends and family fill in
- Current health
- Common concerns
- Details, please
- Physical examination
- Top-to-bottom examination
- No easy answers
- Three-part exam
- Descriptions and definitions
- Looking at LOC
- It’s hard to say
- Language changes
- When, then who
- Thought content
- Insight on insight
- Lost in emotion
- Under pressure
- Get on some other nerves
- See about sight
- Funny face
- Bouncing and spinning
- Check the pipes
- Shrug it off
- Test tongue toughness
- This might hurt
- Acts of strength
- Grace and gait
- Extreme coordination
- Present and absent actions
- Superficially speaking
- Write it down
- Diagnostic tests
- Imaging studies
- Steady, Freddie
- Computed tomography spine scanning
- Computed tomography brain scanning
- Sharper images
- Other tests
- Why do it?
- Contraindications and cautions
- Treatments
- Heads up!
- Surgery
- Be ready before and after
- Condition and complexity count
- Common disorders
- Traumatic brain injury
- To put it bluntly
- Open and exposed
- Case closed
- May be surgical
- The supportive nurse
- Metabolic medicine
- Seizure watch
- Increased intracranial pressure
- Tip the scales
- What to avoid
- Seizures
- Primary and secondary
- Who’s affected . . .
- . . . and how
- Increase O2 or else
- For tonic–clonic seizures
- When medications don’t work . . .
- Continuous
- Tonic–clonic seizure interventions
- Spinal cord injury
- Dangerous damage
- Specifically speaking
- Distention prevention
- Stroke
- The sooner the better
- Number three
- Risk factor facts
- Ischemic stroke
- Hemorrhagic stroke
- Left is right and right is left
- Go with the flow
- Drugs of choice
- Drugs for acute stroke management
- Under the knife
- Multiple monitors
- Anticonvulsant, antiplatelet, anticoagulation
- Subarachnoid hemorrhage
- Women are more prone
- Without warning
- Making the grade
- Watch out
- Rebound effects
- Quick quiz
- Scoring
- Selected references
- 4 Cardiac emergencies
- Understanding cardiac emergencies
- Assessment
- Health history
- Where, what, and why?
- In their own words
- Physical examination
- The heart of it
- First impressions
- Check the chest
- Arms and legs, too
- Light the way
- Neck next
- Then go for the jugular
- Palpate the potentials
- Refill, please
- And compare
- Regular and equal
- What a thrill!
- Border patrol
- Erb and friends
- Upward, downward, zigward, zagward
- 1, 2, 3, 4, and more
- Listen for the “dub”
- Listen for the “lub”
- Auscultation awareness!
- Kentucky galloper
- Tennessee walker
- What S4 says
- Location, location, and . . . timing
- Pinpoint its presence
- Pitch
- Pattern
- Quality
- Intensity
- Rubbed the wrong way
- Bruits
- Bothersome bruits
- Diagnostic tests
- Cardiac monitoring
- A test with 12 views
- Up, down, and across . . .
- . . . from top to bottom . . .
- . . . and, finally, horizontal
- Cardiac marker studies
- Release those enzymes!
- Heart enzymes
- Echocardiography
- Echocardiography aka Echo
- Motion mode
- Echo in 2-D
- TEE combination
- Echo abnormalities
- Hemodynamic monitoring
- Getting involved
- PAP purposes
- PAP’s parts
- PAP and PAOP procedures
- Irritation prevention
- Cardiac output monitoring
- On the rocks or room temperature
- To be continued
- Better assessor
- Treatments
- Drug therapy
- Classified by chemical
- Which receptor
- Mimicking norepinephrine and epinephrine
- Doing it like dopamine
- Excitatory or inhibitory
- How heartening
- Rapid rates
- Fascinating rhythm
- Impending impulses
- Classified information
- Not very discriminating
- Reducing resistance
- Selective (or not)
- Highly discriminating
- Intrinsically sympathetic
- Widely effective
- Selective or nonselective
- Reduce demand, increase supply
- The top three
- Antiangina effect
- Reducing resistance
- Down with everything
- Preventing passage
- Rate reduction
- Conduction reduction
- Benefits vs. risks
- Four classes plus . . .
- No (para)sympathy
- Rhythmic risks
- Make a IB line for the ventricle
- Slowing the seeds of conduction
- Receptor blockers
- Strength reducers
- One way to two way
- Depressing the pacemaker
- Low is good
- Anticlumping
- No new clots
- Circulate freely
- A long history
- Know the program
- Where and how
- Calcium stoppers
- Direct dial
- Without ACE inhibition
- With ACE inhibition
- Less water, less work
- Slower rate
- The short and long of it
- Boosting output
- High potency, big risk
- In the loop
- Potassium-sparing effects
- Sodium stoppers
- Stability with time
- Surgery
- Why bypass?
- CABG varieties
- Repair review
- Plaque, meet Balloon
- Take two aspirins and call me . . .
- Other treatments
- Electrifying experience
- Repeat, repeat, and repeat again
- In sync
- Positively speaking
- Adjustable
- Act early and quickly
- Charge!! And discharge!
- Rhythm restoration
- Dire straits
- Proper placement
- Now to pacing
- Set the beat
- Them bones, them bones
- Check back with the vitals
- Common disorders
- Acute coronary syndrome
- Plaque’s place
- Degree and duration
- It hurts when I do this
- My, my, MI pain
- And many more
- MI relief
- Patency protection
- Treating the heart
- Aortic aneurysm
- Thin and thinner
- Wide vessel, slow flow
- Blood forces
- When symptoms arise
- Acute expansion
- Emergency measures
- ABGs and arterial lines
- Rupture response
- Cardiac arrest
- Cardiac arrhythmias
- Asymptomatic to catastrophic
- Organized by origin and effects
- A matter of degree
- That’s not all
- Cardiac contusion
- And also . . .
- Close watch
- No if hypo
- Cardiac tamponade
- Pericardial pressure
- That’s not all
- When pressure is low
- Keep an eye on the increase
- Heart failure
- When the left loses its faculties
- When right goes wrong
- Blame it on the left
- Just can’t pump enough
- It all goes to swell from here
- Compromising situation
- Kidneys’ contributions
- Counteracting hormone
- Later, on the left
- On the right side
- Pump up the potassium
- Hypertensive emergency
- Rapid rise
- Faulty mechanisms
- Up with pressure
- Maintaining flow
- Taking control
- Regulating reabsorption
- Strain for the brain
- Check the head
- Kidney-related consequences
- Slow pressure cuts
- Much monitoring
- Check in on output
- Quick quiz
- Scoring
- Selected references
- 5 Respiratory emergencies
- Understanding respiratory emergencies
- Assessment
- History
- Cover all the bases
- Pain provocations
- Pillow talk
- Don’t forget to ask
- Sleep disturbance
- Daytime drowsiness
- Sputum production
- Hemoptysis
- Wheezing
- Previous health status
- Family history
- Lifestyle patterns
- Physical examination
- Four steps
- Back, then front
- Beauty in symmetry
- A new angle
- Muscles in motion
- Raising a red flag
- Count on it
- Don’t be blue
- Finger findings
- Leaky lungs
- Probing palpation pain
- Feeling for fremitus
- Evaluating symmetry
- Warning signs
- Sites and sounds
- Warning sounds
- Detecting diaphragm movement
- Auscultation preparation
- Be firm
- Detect the unexpected
- Adventitious sounds
- Diagnostic tests
- Pulse oximetry
- Shedding light on the subject
- Note denotation
- Poisoning precludes pulse oximetry
- End-tidal carbon dioxide monitoring (capnography)
- In-lightened
- Crunching the numbers
- ABG analysis
- ABCs of ABGs
- Valuable values
- A sample scenario
- Seesaw systems
- What’s in a name?
- Sputum analysis
- Bronchoscopy
- To remove and evaluate
- Chest X-ray
- More is better
- X-ray vision
- Magnetic resonance imaging
- View that’s see-through
- Thoracic computed tomography scan
- CT in 3-D
- Ventilation–perfusion scan
- Two-tined test
- V/Q caveat
- Pulmonary angiography
- More reliable, more risks
- Postprocedure procedures
- Treatments
- Drug therapy
- Reversing obstruction
- Inhalation therapy
- Aerosol treatments
- Goes with the flows
- Other talents
- Through the nose
- Not so positive
- After the fact
- Conversation stopper
- Open up
- Be quick about it
- Not for everyone
- Through the nose
- A conscious choice
- Difficult and damaging
- Confirm ETT placement
- When to ventilate
- Accentuate the positive
- Be alarmed
- Be extra vigilant
- Fully equipped
- Concentrate on concentration
- Surgery
- Gotta have some negative pressure
- Emergency or planned procedure
- Afterward
- Common disorders
- Airway obstruction
- It’s anatomical
- Inhalation injuries
- When it’s a little . . .
- When it’s a lot . . .
- And when it’s way too much . . .
- Submersion injury
- Pneumothorax
- Open book
- Closed call
- Every breath hurts
- Further findings
- Did we mention the tension?
- With trauma
- With less lung collapse
- With more lung collapse
- With tension
- Status asthmaticus
- Asthma overview
- Making things worse
- Outside factors
- Factors within
- Constricting factors
- Irritants in the workplace
- Genetic messes
- A potent mix
- Attachment disorder
- A not-so-good goblet
- Bucking bronchos
- Quick quiz
- Scoring
- Selected references
- 6 Gastrointestinal emergencies
- Understanding GI emergencies
- Assessment
- Health history
- Previous health status
- Further questions
- Physical examination
- In order, please
- General inspection
- To striae or not to striae
- Follow the clock
- Do you hear what I hear?
- Tube tip
- Sound class
- Sound off
- Percussion precaution
- Tympany and dullness
- Light palpation
- Deep palpation
- Percussion discussion
- Palpation problem
- Diagnostic tests
- Abdominal X-ray
- Reading the rays
- Colonoscopy
- Postprocedure
- CT scan
- Scads of scans
- Ultrasound
- EGD
- Fecal studies
- MRI
- MRI mire
- Peritoneal fluid analysis
- Peritoneal through paracentesis
- During . . .
- . . . and after
- Treatments
- Drug therapy
- How fast?
- GI intubation
- Rarely seen
- Fluid watch
- When it’s done
- Dealing with obstruction
- Common disorders
- Abdominal trauma
- An explosive situation
- To put it bluntly
- Other considerations
- Trauma physics
- Buckle up
- Have a look-see
- Acute GI bleeding
- Maybe multiple morbidities
- Upper causes
- Lower causes
- Source signs
- Signs and symptoms
- Don’t forget oxygen
- Appendicitis
- . . . and then later
- Cholecystitis
- Bad to the stone
- Diverticulitis
- Packed in the sac
- Severe steps
- Quick quiz
- Scoring
- Selected references
- 7 Musculoskeletal emergencies and wound management
- Understanding musculoskeletal emergencies
- Assessment
- Health history
- Any ouchies?
- Out-of-joint, fractured, or all muscle
- What goes in
- Physical assessment
- First thing’s first
- With feeling
- A watchful eye
- Assessing the bones and joints
- Is the TMJ A-OK?
- Check the neck
- Head circles and chin-ups
- Spine-tingling procedure
- Lift and rotate
- Flex and extend
- Swing into position
- Up to the elbows
- Rotate and flap
- Lift a finger; make a fist
- At arm’s length
- Hip, hip, hooray!
- As the hip turns
- On bended knees
- The ankle angle
- The long and short of it
- Assessing the muscles
- Tuning in to muscle tone
- Wrestling with muscle strength
- Testing the bi’s and tri’s
- Forcing the hand
- Diagnostic tests
- Arthrocentesis
- Telltale findings
- Doing double duty
- CT scan
- Beam me up
- MRI
- Must be your animal magnetism
- X-rays
- Treatments
- Get up and go again
- Drug therapy
- Nonsurgical treatments
- Don’t move a muscle!
- Surgery
- Common disorders
- Amputations (traumatic)
- Compartment syndrome
- Contusions
- History of violence
- Dislocations and fractures
- Trauma and force
- Location and direction
- Relationship and stability
- Don’t go soft on us now
- It’s a hematoma!
- Organization is key
- I’m brand new!
- What’s more . . .
- Inspired casting
- Pelvic plan
- Puncture wounds
- Strains and sprains
- Sprain, sprain, go away!
- Sprain symptoms
- Quick quiz
- Scoring
- Selected references
- 8 Renal, genitourinary, and gynecologic emergencies
- Understanding GU and gynecologic emergencies
- Assessment
- Peruse the record
- Sex-specific
- Health history
- Comfort zone
- Pregnancy clues
- Physical examination
- At ease, please
- Renal red flags
- Behavioral hints
- It’s in the skin
- Leading off: The abdomen and back
- Genitalia concerns
- Diagnostic tests
- Blood studies
- CT scan
- IVP
- KUB radiography
- Laparoscopy
- MRI
- Percutaneous renal biopsy
- Renal angiography
- On closer inspection
- Renal scan
- Ultrasonography
- Urine studies
- Concentrate, concentrate
- Treatments
- Drug therapy
- Nonsurgical procedures
- Basket boomerang
- Fluid watch
- Surgical procedures
- Common disorders
- Kidney trauma
- And that’s not all
- Hemodynamics count
- Wound care
- And that’s not all
- Ovarian cyst
- Poly problems
- Pelvic inflammatory disease
- Upping the ante
- Additional considerations
- Severe situation
- Pyelonephritis
- Antibiotic aid
- Renal calculi
- Sexual assault
- What’s in a name?
- Rape-trauma syndrome
- In good hands
- Collecting evidence
- Medication and follow-up
- Testicular torsion
- Intra vs. extra
- Urinary tract infection
- Quick quiz
- Scoring
- Selected references
- 9 Obstetric emergencies
- Understanding obstetric emergencies
- Meconium-stained amniotic fluid
- Emergency nursing management of meconium-stained amniotic fluid
- Shoulder dystocia
- Emergency nursing management of shoulder dystocia
- Prolapsed umbilical cord
- Emergency nursing management of prolapsed umbilical cord
- Rupture of the maternal uterus
- Emergency nursing management of rupture of the maternal uterus
- Amniotic fluid embolus
- Emergency nursing management of amniotic fluid embolus
- Quick quiz
- Scoring
- Selected references
- 10 Maxillofacial and ocular emergencies
- Understanding maxillofacial and ocular emergencies
- Quickness counts
- Assessment
- Health history
- Eye spy
- Earmark past problems
- Looking at lids
- Conjunctiva
- Corneal matters
- Testing
- Cardinal concerns
- Testing
- A very telling Snellen
- E for everyone else
- Upon closer inspection
- Face and sinuses
- Gums . . .
- . . . and tongues
- Gag order
- Diagnostic tests
- CT scan
- It’s orbital
- Facial X-rays
- Fluorescein angiography
- Fluorescein staining
- Ultrasonography
- Treatments
- Drug therapy
- Ophthalmic agents
- Surgery
- Common disorders
- Chemical burns to the eye
- Corneal abrasion
- To patch or not to patch
- Epistaxis
- Pack it up
- Facial fractures
- Foreign body in the ear
- Orbital fracture
- Retinal detachment
- Soft tissue facial injuries
- Quick quiz
- Scoring
- Selected references
- 11 Psychiatric emergencies
- Understanding psychiatric emergencies
- Medical versus psychiatric?
- Specialized members of the psychiatric health care team
- Using the nursing process
- Assessment
- History and physical assessment
- Planning
- Implementation
- Common nursing interventions
- Evaluation
- Common disorders
- Acute psychosis
- Signs and symptoms of acute psychosis
- Nursing interventions for patients with psychotic behavior
- Medication management in psychosis
- Violent, disruptive, aggressive, or excited behaviors
- Maintaining safety with the agitated patient
- Seclusion and restraint in the ED for aggressive or agitated behavior
- Suicidal ideation or attempt
- Suicide and depression
- Warning signs of suicide
- Caring for patients with suicide risk
- Suicide Assessment Five-Step Evaluation and Triage
- Keeping the patient safe
- Acute anxiety states and panic
- Symptoms of acute anxiety and panic disorder
- Treatment approaches and nursing interventions
- Delirium and dementia
- Delirium
- Screening for delirium
- Nursing interventions
- Dementia
- Nursing interventions
- Intoxication and overdose of alcohol
- Alcohol
- Legal limits
- The intoxicating effects of alcohol
- Nursing care of the patient with alcohol intoxication or alcohol overdose
- Intoxication and overdose of stimulants or opioids
- Stimulants
- Nursing care of the patient with stimulant overdose
- Opioids
- Nursing care of the patient with opioid overdose
- Situations of abuse—older adult, child, intimate partner, or human trafficking
- Older adult abuse/neglect
- Child abuse/neglect
- Intimate partner violence
- Human trafficking
- Nursing care for victims of abuse
- Additional interventions for
- Iatrogenic emergencies
- Serotonin syndrome
- Nursing interventions for the patient with serotonin syndrome
- Neuroleptic malignant syndrome
- Medication-induced acute dystonia
- Quick quiz
- Scoring
- Selected references
- 12 Environmental emergencies
- Understanding environmental emergencies
- Assessment
- Diagnostic tests
- Treatments
- Temperature related
- Other treatments
- Suck it up
- Common disorders
- Burns
- It’s electric
- Scorching brews
- Not just a matter of degrees anymore
- For your epidermis only
- Two thicknesses
- Tracking burn traits
- Configure this
- More than just skin deep
- Paging severe burns
- Everything in moderation
- Minor but still important
- Meanwhile, back in the lab
- After stabilization
- Listen to the lungs
- Breathing room
- In and out
- Administration station
- Caustic substance ingestion
- Regular offenders
- Call the pros
- Look, listen, and ask
- Careful preparation
- Hyperthermia
- Feeling hot, hot, hot
- Critical measures
- In addition to the cooldown
- Hypothermia
- Likely candidates
- Temperature dependent
- Cardiac concerns
- Monitoring dependent
- As time goes by
- Frostbite
- Likely candidates
- Stages of frostbite
- Animal and human bites
- Poisoning
- Emesis nemesis
- Enter the IV
- Give the patient some air
- Quick quiz
- Scoring
- Selected references
- 13 Mass casualty and disaster
- Introduction to mass casualty and disaster nursing
- Types of disasters
- Natural disasters
- Man-made disasters
- Natural vs. man-made disasters
- Disaster preparedness
- National Preparedness Goal
- The National Preparedness System
- National Response Framework
- National Incident Management System
- Incident Command System
- Hospital Incident Command System
- Workplace and individual nurse preparation for disaster
- Workplace preparation
- Individual nurse preparedness
- Triage
- Disaster recovery
- Quick quiz
- Scoring
- Selected references
- 14 Shock and multisystem trauma emergencies
- Understanding shock and multisystem trauma emergencies
- Shock to the system
- Here, there, and everywhere
- Assessment
- Primary assessment: Use the alphabet
- Secondary assessment
- Diagnostic tests
- Blood studies
- Less common but important
- Radiologic and imaging studies
- Treatments
- Fluid resuscitation
- Blood transfusion therapy
- Refusin’ transfusion
- Drug therapy
- Surgery
- Common disorders
- Anaphylactic shock
- All about speed
- Here it comes again!
- It’s in the skin
- Looking at ABG
- Eyeing the IV
- Perfusion pointers
- Cardiogenic shock
- Stable but brief
- CO cycle
- Compensation clues
- That’s progress for ya
- No going back
- And just for good measure
- Fascinating rhythm
- I’m going in
- Hypovolemic shock
- Shock sequence
- Capillary cues
- Watch for blood
- Neurogenic shock
- Septic shock
- Truth about consequences
- Hyper . . .
- . . . or hypo
- Ups and downs
- Overload alert!
- Multisystem trauma
- Out of time
- Six degrees of contamination
- Quick quiz
- Scoring
- Selected references
- Appendices and index
- Practice makes perfect
- Glossary
- Index
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- Gerð : 208
- Höfundur : 14239
- Útgáfuár : 2019
- Leyfi : 379