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I have technical questions...Rating: (votes: 5) I'm a student. In my clinical rotation in LTC, we could bring in our own things. Oximeters, bp cuffs, etc. Frequently there was not enough equipment to go around and this made our impact on staff less annoying and allowed us to do vitals more quickly. I'm wondering, though, if the same is allowed in hospitals (and I can see reasons why admn may not/wouldn't like it). Also, if you CAN bring in some of your own equipment, how do you carry it without contaminating, etc. For instance, I would love to be able to carry a small pulse ox and my bp cuff, and a thermometer with extra sterile sheaths, extra alcohol scabs (in packages) around with the "normal" equipment, steth, scissors, tape, penlight, etc. I doubt the capacity to put all of that in my pocket, however. Given that I'm not a kangaroo. I already carry my own bottle of hand sanititzer. Woah, wait a minute there spunky!"Also, if you CAN bring in some of your own equipment, how do you carry it without contaminating, etc. For instance, I would love to be able to carry a small pulse ox and my bp cuff, and a thermometer with extra sterile sheaths, extra alcohol scabs (in packages) around with the "normal" equipment, steth, scissors, tape, penlight, etc. I doubt the capacity to put all of that in my pocket, however. Given that I'm not a kangaroo."Bolded is all you may bring to the hospital. Use the hospital supplies. I am sure your instructor and the floor manager will "let you know" LOL, that you need to use hospital equipment because there is a standard of measure with their equipment. About cleaning per use. The floor will have wipes. Ask when you get there. BTW your question about contaminating is a little late if you are already using your stuff at the LTC without cleaning between uses. Comment:
Tread carefully when bringing your own electronic equiment that must be routinely calibrated (automatic BP cuffs, pulse oximetry machines, etc.). The healthcare facility is calibrating this type of equipment at routine intervals. If a poor patient outcome results and you cannot prove that you properly calibrated your personal supplies, you might get into trouble.
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oh my, yes yes yes, i've certainly experienced 'waiting' for various pieces of equipment, (more so in the past than nowadays) as well as time wasted chasing around who has it/put it where. (before all staff have cell phones, we literally had to walk and walk and walk and visually search out our coworkers).The equipment i owned, and carried with me, like my stethoscope, were never taken into isolation rooms. Isolation rooms (whether it's cuz pt is infected, or pt has compromised immune system) usually have their own cuffs, thermometers, etc. in that room.I never brought my own BP cuff to work, but, i saw nurses who did. Many units i worked in, had a BP cuff on the wall of every room, making lugging one of your own around all day unnecessary. The closer you get to acute care, the closer the items you need are usually kept....(often right in the room)imo, often, the further out you get from acute care, the further you have to walk to get your hands on various types of equipment and the more staff you have to share that equipment amongst. But, when you are staff in less acute care settings, you become more organized, have systems in place, have set locations for items to be stored for others looking for it, and many of the staff do figure out how to have always have the items you need most often right around handy. I have had coworkers who had clipboards which opened up and had a small drawer in there for small items. Others had 'fanny packs' of a sort, and besides filling in the 'purse' area of the belt,some items would hang off of the sides of the fanny pack.Some left their stuff on nearby med carts, or in bottom drawer of med carts. Still, you have to go back to get it now and then, but, not as far of a walk.We all cleaned our own stuff with alcohol wipes, usually.
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btw, if you do bring your own BP cuff around, you might have to check if the facility, or your school, might require you ensure that your cuff is properly calibrated.?also,you'd still need to know where the extra small cuffs, and the extra large cuffs,and the extra extra large cuffs are all stored. The size of cuff you use, (as well as whereabouts on the arm it is placed) can alter the reads you are getting.so if you are using only standard size cuff,on extra small or extra big arm, your numbers might be off a bit.
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Ok. Good to know. Suspected as much due to thinking there would be concerns about efficacy of equipment and sanitation. Anything used was, of course, sanitized between patients. None of the students had an oximeter, so we used one belonging to the instructor. Center was aware. How do you deal with a lack of supplies/basic working equipment - or is this something that occurs primarily in LTC and hospitals have better resources? Or is it something with which you just learn to deal.
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Quote from Jean Marie46514btw, if you do bring your own BP cuff around, you might have to check if the facility, or your school, might require you ensure that your cuff is properly calibrated.?
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Quote from SadalaI suppose that was part of the question. Don't know that another facility would even allow that, dependent upon the type of facility. So if it seems that usually one is not allowed to do so, then that is good info to have.
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Quote from SadalaOk. Good to know. Suspected as much due to thinking there would be concerns about efficacy of equipment and sanitation. Anything used was, of course, sanitized between patients. None of the students had an oximeter, so we used one belonging to the instructor. Center was aware. How do you deal with a lack of supplies/basic working equipment - or is this something that occurs primarily in LTC and hospitals have better resources? Or is it something with which you just learn to deal.
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rofl, i am just NOW noticing the first two posts, ha, i must have been posting at same exact moment they did. To the OP, while re-reading your question,in hospitals,in most units,the cuff will be on the wall.the more acute care the setting, (like ICU, ER, etc)the more equipment you have in each room, and the closer and more abundant the equip is. You'll see.
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Not really recommending this, but here's what I did. At my first job as an RN on a med/surg floor, the lack of clean, functioning equipment and supplies in a regional trauma center was astounding to me. As soon as I was off orientation, I wrote a 4-page "vent" letter to the managers, detailing just an hour or so of my shift. This included all of the up-and-down, back-and-forth wasteful ventures around the unit and even into other units to "borrow" equipment. It also included how many trips I had to make and to how many supply rooms to gather enough necessities to actually perform each dressing change or NG placement.The letter ended up traveling up the ladder to goodness-knows-who, but the end result was multiple new units of durable equipment (rolling vitals carts, etc.) and a re-calibration of our laundry and supply standards. Seems that those who lived in the ivory tower really didn't know how bad it was on the floor. Quote from SadalaOk. Good to know. Suspected as much due to thinking there would be concerns about efficacy of equipment and sanitation. Anything used was, of course, sanitized between patients. None of the students had an oximeter, so we used one belonging to the instructor. Center was aware. How do you deal with a lack of supplies/basic working equipment - or is this something that occurs primarily in LTC and hospitals have better resources? Or is it something with which you just learn to deal.
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Hospitals have far greater availability of equipment. Over the years I did prefer to carry certain things in my pocket. Hand sanitizer, trauma shears, my stethoscope.....I carry a pocket pulse ox (when I was a rapid response nurse and house supervisor I am all over the hospital....NOTHING drives me crazier to be called to a pateint in distress while they look for the pulse ox) B/P cuff....no. If I can feel a pulse...they have a pressure. A hemostat, some alcohol swabs, IV caps and tape.
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Thanks. I appreciate all of the info.
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