Remove 2011 Remove Emergency Nursing Remove Resuscitation
article thumbnail

Emergencies of the Third Trimester

Advanced Emergency Nursing from AENJ

Western Journal of Emergency Medicine, 12(4), 571. Preeclampsia/ Eclampsia - Emergency Department Resources Weingart, S., Reid, C (2011) Prehospital resuscitative hysterotomy op.cit. Third Trimester Bleeding [ppt] Scott Ramshur, MD Third trimester bleeding [ppt] Tom Archer, MD MBA UCSD Anesthesiology Kinney-Ham, L.,

OB/GYN 40
article thumbnail

Oxygen Powered Resuscitators

Advanced Emergency Nursing from AENJ

This is the fifth part of our series on "Early Modern Resuscitation." " Part I: Oral Airways, early resuscitation, and recognition of airway care. It was not a practical resuscitative aid until production could be commercially successful (~1895) and made portable in compressed form. Pulmotor is 1907. Beecher, M.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Trending Sources

article thumbnail

Carbon Dioxide As A Resuscitative Gas

Advanced Emergency Nursing from AENJ

This is the fourth part of our series on "Early Modern Resuscitation." " Part I: Oral Airways, early resuscitation, and recognition of airway care. The select bibliography will provide ample links to extend your reading. “Carbon Dioxide Resuscitation?” You think to yourself, “ What could that be?” In 1927, H.W.

article thumbnail

Ballistic Follies

Advanced Emergency Nursing from AENJ

It is not possible during acute resuscitation or at any time before a complete investigation, or even trial, to know who is innocent, guilty, or what occurred during the altercation. Ballistic injuries in the emergency department. Emergency medicine practice, 13(12), 1-30. Accurate time entries are important to document.

article thumbnail

The Nose: the other route to the lungs

Advanced Emergency Nursing from AENJ

This Blog episode concerns aspects of the concept of using the nose to obtain an airway or to ventilate emergency patients; it does not deal comprehensively with all aspects thereof that a specialist might do. Few people now remember that a strong early proposal in the move for expired air resuscitation was Mouth to Nose.