Organizing the Supply Room.
Wednesday, July 15, 2009
The Supply Room
Organizing the Supply Room.
Free Samples?
I was sent on a rather interesting errand today. My coworker and I embarked on another delivery trip. Our destinations were the blood bank and the blood lab. Yes, there are differences between the two locations. As I’ve explained in an earlier entry, the blood bank is the place to go to when you need to retrieve certain aspects of the patient’s blood: platelets, red blood cells, and the like. We went there to return a pack of red blood platelets because a consent form was not signed. What piqued my interest the most about our trip was our delivery item to the blood lab: urine. Blood samples are only one of the many things that are examined at the blood lab. Specimen samples such as urine, mucous, and much to my chagrin, even feces are brought to be analyzed for sepsis and other complications. Most of the time these samples, for sanitary purposes, are transported through a tube system very much like the drive through system when you withdraw from a bank. The samples are placed in these well padded, tube-like containers and with the push of the right combination of buttons; your sample is shipped without the tedious walk downstairs.
Tube Transport System.
Friday, July 10, 2009
There Will Be Blood
An ABG sample.
Blood is also drawn for an ABG. ABG stands for arterial blood gas. An ABG is a blood test that measures the level of oxygen and carbon dioxide in the blood. The blood is withdrawn from a small artery and then analyzed by a special machine that records the amount of carbon dioxide and oxygen in the patient’s blood and helps determine how well the patient breathes. Occasionally I would be asked to deliver the ABG sample to the ABG lab. The package is placed in ice and it is imperative that it gets to the lab as soon as possible before the ice melts.
Special Delivery!
Retrieving our order from the Supply Chain Services Department.
For the gowns, we ventured to the distribution center located in the Supply Chain Services Department which is where orders for medical supplies are delivered to stock each unit’s supply room closet. In other rooms, the Supply Chain Services Department was the hospital’s very own Office Max. After retrieving the order, we helped the nursing aides restock patient gowns in each patient’s room. Though these errands were simple tasks, they gave us the liberty to explore the hospital and learn more about the other departments as well as how everything in the hospital is a well organized system.
Wednesday, July 1, 2009
Specialties
Stroke pamphlets I helped set up.
I believe I forgot to mention in my earlier entries that the majority of the patients admitted to the 6 and 7 Greene Intensive Care Units are stroke patients. As a matter of fact the unit, in general, specializes in caring for stroke patients. The registered nurses who work there are required to recognize all the different symptoms and varieties of stroke as well as other major syndromes in order to determine the most beneficial method of treatment for the patients. My mentor had asked me to help her cut out and laminate stroke pamphlets, reminders, warning signs, schedules, and other pamphlets for her to post on the unit’s bulletin boards. I gained a lot of knowledge from laminating these pamphlets. I learned about symptoms not only for stroke but also for Hemorrhage, typical cerebellum signs of lack of coordination, typical brainstem signs of cranial nerve and other deficits, the five major syndromes and their typical signs, as well as the functions of the Cranial Nerve section and limb section. The information I had acquired from laminating these pamphlets will be most beneficial to me for future use if and when I do pursue a career in the medical field.
Expectations
The book that contains the patient labels.
The flow sheets are sixteen pages long. Each page requires the nurse to write in reports of the patient’s condition, EKG levels, blood pressure, IV drip, amount of medication, and much more complex requirements. I’ve always enjoyed labeling patient medical records not because I find it fun to stick stickers on paper, but because the information contained in them is mind blowing. In these records, doctors write consultations. These consultations remind me of chemistry lab reports and English research papers combined. Each consultation contains the conditions, medical history, progress, and a thoughtful biography of the patient. Through reading these consultations my medical vocabulary has expanded and I realize just how ill these patients were. It’s also through labeling these charts and records that I know what to expect when approaching to become a doctor.