| |

About the Author
Judy
Boehm, RN, MSN, is a cardiac clinical nurse specialist living now
in Bradenton, Florida.
Beginning in 1975 she worked
as CNS for the cardiac units at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center
in Lebanon, New Hampshire, retiring in early 2006. Since the
formation of the CPR Committee in 1983, she was active in
establishing policies and procedures for resuscitations, translating
resuscitation research into practice, selection of/training in
emergency equipment, life support education, and CPR data
collection/ analysis.
Judy received her MSN from University of Alabama, and
her BSN from Case Western Reserve University. She enjoys
playing golf with her husband, walking her Golden Retriever, and
learning about tropical plants.
email the author: [email protected]
ZOLL Medical
Corporation Corporate Headquarters 269 Mill
Road Chelmsford, MA USA 01824-4105 tel.
(800)348-9011 fax (978)421-0025
email: [email protected] website: www.zoll.com |
view
newsletter archive
|
|
Welcome to Code
Communications, ZOLL's online
newsletter for hospital clinicians interested in the field of
resuscitation. Each month we will explore a new topic in the field
with an emphasis on practical solutions for changing practice and
improving outcomes.
Have you ever been faced with having to perform CPR under an unusual circumstance and not being sure of how to proceed to obtain the best patient outcome? In the December and January issues of Code Communications, information will be provided about how to perform CPR under the following circumstances. How is the resuscitation process changed when the victim is in a public area of the hospital? Is the hospital responsible for responding to the arrest of a victim outside, yet on hospital property? How does the rescuer assess the victim and perform CPR when the victim is in a small, confined space such as the bathroom? Should the patient who falls to the floor be kept there for the duration of the resuscitation? When a pressure relieving mattress is on the bed, how is CPR best performed? What changes should be made to CPR when the victim is pregnant? How is ventilation altered when the patient has a tracheal stoma? How does the rescuer get access to the victim's chest when s/he is in a Halo fixation system? Read on to learn the answers to these questions.
|
|