I was under the impression all LPN/LVNs had to have their IV certification by now, but I may have been mistaken. I know all new LPN/LVNs are required to be certified along with the medication class.
Anyway, I was doing paramedic clinicals at a private EMS since everyone else was filled. It's right down the street from my house and a great way to get geriatric assessments in (except this place was dead. I get more assessments in when I am working, but I can't use them since my school doesn't have a contract with the company).
So we're called for an IV start. Usually, this means that the nurses have poked the patients so many times that it's cruel for them to try again. I think I've seen about six times on both arms before they called my partner to do an IV start.
We're waiting for the nurse to bring us their supplies and we're looking at his veins without the tourniquet on. He has really good veins it looks like and my preceptor wonders why they called us. We check for a fistula and confirm with the nurse there is no reason not to use the other hand.
Since I'm the student, I get to do the IV start the first time. With the tourniquet on, his hand veins are good, a lot better than the ones I've seen in the ER. They are tiny though, but you can still feel them and I have a choice of a 22 and some other tiny size. However, his forearm vein is huge. It is bigger than my ac. Granted, you can't see it but you can feel it.
So I go for the hand vein in case I blow it so the other medic has something to work with. I have it in quickly and I am withdrawing the needle while the other EMT hands me stuff. The nurse walks in and informs us he is a hard stick.
Yeah, no. He is not a hard stick. Maybe he was a hard stick the first time because he was dehydrated, but this time around he had freaking garden hoses for veins. They had a 250 cc bag with medication in it w/ a pump, but they may have dripped fluids before. We don't think they even looked since he had several suitable veins on his hands and that really, really easy one on the forearm.
Anyway, I was doing paramedic clinicals at a private EMS since everyone else was filled. It's right down the street from my house and a great way to get geriatric assessments in (except this place was dead. I get more assessments in when I am working, but I can't use them since my school doesn't have a contract with the company).
So we're called for an IV start. Usually, this means that the nurses have poked the patients so many times that it's cruel for them to try again. I think I've seen about six times on both arms before they called my partner to do an IV start.
We're waiting for the nurse to bring us their supplies and we're looking at his veins without the tourniquet on. He has really good veins it looks like and my preceptor wonders why they called us. We check for a fistula and confirm with the nurse there is no reason not to use the other hand.
Since I'm the student, I get to do the IV start the first time. With the tourniquet on, his hand veins are good, a lot better than the ones I've seen in the ER. They are tiny though, but you can still feel them and I have a choice of a 22 and some other tiny size. However, his forearm vein is huge. It is bigger than my ac. Granted, you can't see it but you can feel it.
So I go for the hand vein in case I blow it so the other medic has something to work with. I have it in quickly and I am withdrawing the needle while the other EMT hands me stuff. The nurse walks in and informs us he is a hard stick.
Yeah, no. He is not a hard stick. Maybe he was a hard stick the first time because he was dehydrated, but this time around he had freaking garden hoses for veins. They had a 250 cc bag with medication in it w/ a pump, but they may have dripped fluids before. We don't think they even looked since he had several suitable veins on his hands and that really, really easy one on the forearm.

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