Journal of emergency nursing : JEN : official publication of the Emergency Department Nurses Association
-
Review Case Reports
Hypokalemic Cardiac Arrest: Narrative Review of Case Reports and Current State of Science.
Hypokalemic cardiac arrest is an uncommon occurrence in the emergency department. Electrocardiogram findings related to hypokalemic cardiac arrest include prolonged QT, U waves, and preventricular contractions leading to Torsades de Pointes and then arrest. Literature evaluating the prevalence of hypokalemic cardiac arrest is scarce, and its management is lacking. This review provides a summary of current literature, recommendations from current guidelines, and proposed management strategies of hypokalemic cardiac arrest. ⋯ More evidence is necessary to support treatment recommendations for hypokalemic cardiac arrest; however, it is the authors' opinion that, if identified early during cardiac arrest, intravenous potassium should be administered to treat a reversible cause for cardiac arrest.
-
This study aimed to evaluate the indirect relationship of job stress with triage competency through professional self-concept among emergency nurses in Korea. ⋯ Professional self-concept may be an important determinant of triage competency among emergency nurses. To increase triage competency among emergency nurses, individual nurse and management efforts are recommended to foster professional self-concept and reduce emergency nurse job stress.
-
This project aimed to create and implement a safe and efficient role-based process to rapidly extricate traumatically injured persons transported to the emergency department via police transport or private vehicle. ⋯ Through simulation, the ED interdisciplinary team was able to develop a role-based safe and efficient rapid extrication process. Educating new ED personnel, security, and Pennsylvania police continues to facilitate ongoing safe rapid extrication practices in the emergency department.
-
Insertion of a peripheral intravenous catheter into the external jugular vein is regularly performed in emergency departments to treat patients with difficult intravenous access. Although emergency nurses are experienced in inserting peripheral intravenous catheters, there is an inconsistent practice and a lack of education and training regarding the insertion of catheters in the external jugular vein. This manuscript provides a practical guide for emergency nurses to care for patients who require an external jugular peripheral intravenous catheter. Key information found in this manuscript includes indications for external jugular intravenous access, the nurse's role in performing external jugular peripheral intravenous catheters, and clinical considerations when caring for patients with an external jugular peripheral intravenous catheter.
-
Standard precautions, including protections from blood and body fluid exposure, are designed to protect health care providers from infections. Sharps safety practices rarely include the potential for the unconscious patient's own body to be a potential source of clinician percutaneous injury from sharp objects outside of the perioperative setting. This case report reviews a percutaneous injury to the hand of a physician who was performing chest compressions on a patient with an out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. ⋯ The sternal wire rotated owing to the initial chest compressions, breaking the clinician's nitrile glove and producing an open wound on the thenar region of the clinician's right hand. Application of a 10 × 10 12-ply gauze pack on the chest of the patient in cardiac arrest allowed the resuscitation team to continue with the compressions with no further wounds from the wire. This case report is a novel contribution to the published literature and advances standard precautions considerations in patients with out-of-hospital cardiac arrest, with the sternotomy wire from previous surgery as a source of percutaneous clinician injury during chest compression.