Here are some key focus areas for Exam 2 which covers Modules 3, 4, & 5. Review course modules for
information. You are responsible for all content in the chapters, power points, lecture notes, tables, red
flags, figur
...
Here are some key focus areas for Exam 2 which covers Modules 3, 4, & 5. Review course modules for
information. You are responsible for all content in the chapters, power points, lecture notes, tables, red
flags, figures, boxes, with special focus points on the following topics:
Module 3 Tissue Integrity
Relate principles of triage to prioritize care delivery in a disaster situation.
Appraise the roles of the nurse in emergency preparedness and response.
Prioritize nursing care for the patient during the acute phase of burn injury.
Develop a comprehensive plan of care for a patient with alteration in tissue integrity.
Describe the physiological process involved in the maintenance and restoration of health
and wellness, across the lifespan, as it relates to tissue integrity.
o Burns
Review RN delegation of tasks
Infection prevention
Hand washing and perform sterile dressing changes (LPNs can do dressing changes just
reinforce that they have to be sterile) They also must have their PPEs on
Understand how to support severely burned patients from resuscitation to discharge/rehab;
identify priority actions in each phase
Adequate fluid status during resuscitation phase by checking urine output;
Priority for burn patient coming to ED are fluids; priority for patient that has been electrocuted
make sure these patients are on a cardia monitor; what are potential consequences of burns
are self-image and depression
Treatment for patient that develops loud, brassy cough – what is going on here inhalation
injury (They are about to lose their airway, so we want to get ready to intubate) You would do
the same for a person who is having difficulty swallowing or drooling.
Understand common medications administered to burn patients and why the medications are
given i.e. for pain drug of choice is morphine, prevention of ulcers use Tagamet, famotidine, or
ranitidine
Understand nursing assessment of burn patient – what is continuously monitored – s/s to
watch for i.e. drooling, difficulty swallowing-what does the nurse do first? Assess their airway
and listen to their lungs; psychosocial impact of sever burn- would depression be normal? Yes
Parkland Formula
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Exam 2
Parklands 4mlx Body Space Affects x kg, remember 1st half goes in the first 8 hrs. 2nd half goes
in over the next 16 hrs. Use Lactated Ringer
How to calculate BSA%
Understand lab/ABG values for a burn patient i.e. what is typically seen in burn patients?
Hyperkalemia, hyponatremia, and edema
Describe the different layers of burns r/t involvement of dermis/epidermis
Superficial Partial-Thickness Burn effects epidermis and superficial dermis. They are very
painful and blister formation is common.
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Exam 2
o Disaster preparedness
Understand colored tags and how would you educate others
Yellow tag example: open fracture
Red tag example: chest pain, suspected stroke/MI
Green tag example: simple fracture
Black tag example: agonal respirations, open head wound
Understand personal preparedness plan – what do you include or consider?
How many days should you pack for yourself? 3
What do you need to consider? Food, medication, water, non-perishable foods, pets, childcare,
and older adults
What does the RN need to do to be prepared on the floor
Gather supplies
Organize
Move stable patients
Know the chain of command
Module 4 Gas Exchange
Develop a comprehensive plan of care for a patient with alteration in Gas Exchange.
Describe the physiological process involved in the maintenance and restoration of health
and wellness, across the lifespan, as it relates to Gas Exchange.
Evaluate laboratory data and clinical manifestations to determine the adequacy of
oxygenation and ventilatory interventions.
Plan nursing care for the patient being mechanically ventilated.
o Emergency Nursing/Mass casualty/Trauma Nursing
Role of RN in ED when there is a mass casualty?
Triage- The most experienced nurse should do this
Understand critical incident stress debriefing?
Process what they just went though (destress)
How to prevent PTSD as a nurse?
Exercise, stay hydrated, eat healthy, get enough sleep, avoid caffeine, and talk to someone
Understand how you would triage incoming patients from mass casualty – examples know the
difference between traditional and mass casualty
Traditional, you would take care of the most critical first.
Mass casualty, take care of the most viable (most likely to live with the least resources)
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Exam 2
Mass casualty event – paramedic, Hospital incident commander-can end a mass casualty
event, public information officer, triage officer, medical command physician – hierarchy and
roles
Review RN delegation of tasks
Never delegate what you can’t EAT (evaluation, assessment, and teaching) also invasive stuff
Specialty teams available
Trauma, Anesthesia, rapid response, stroke team, and forensic nursing
CPR – family presence
Recommended so they can see what’s going on
Consider vulnerable populations – establishing trust
Children, elderly, rape victim, intellectual disability, homeless, migrant workers it’s important to
establish trust
Priority assessments i.e. which color would nurse focus on first? Red; patient arrives with O2
mask on? Assess airway and make sure he/she is having effective respirations
o Gas Exchange
Understand Rapid Response Team role
The respond to emergencies hopefully before the person codes
Pulmonary embolus – patho? Clot in the lungs
Risk factors? DVT, a. fib, post surgical, long bone fracturs
S/S you may see? SOB, dyspnea, cyanotic, anxiety
Assessment
Treatment? Oxygen, elevated HOB, anticoagulant
Test? D-dimer will be elevated
Anticoagulants –monitor PTT and PLT for heparin (hold, call doctor, and assess for bleeding if
PLT are out of range) is for heparin
patient education? Soft tooth brush, electric razor, avoid NSAIDs, ibuprofen, injuries, and
check for bruising and occult blood
ABGs for respiratory issues i.e. COPD? Respiratory Acidosis
ph low (7.35-7.45), co2 high (45-35), bicarb low (22-26)
Common medications for intubated patients – Propofol, sedatives, pain meds, antianxiety,
Pepcid (stress ulcers)
what to monitor, patient education
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Exam 2
Mechanical ventilation – assessment PEEP of 20cm (it’s too high which can cause a
pneumothorax)
treatment- prevent VAP ETT removed by suction and provide oral care
Low pressure alarm is cause by disconnect; high pressure alarm is caused by patient bucking or
coughing
If you can’t figure out why the alarm is going off what do you do? Bag them
Agitated patient what does the nurse assess? Assess and then treat what is causing the
agitation
Dyspneic with normal O2 sat? Assess and try to find out what is making the patient short of
breath. If it’s pain give morphine if it’s anxiety give benzos.
Flail chest-anticipated interventions?
Monitor educate patient to splint when coughing and provide pain management as long as gas
exchange is good.
Understand refractory hypoxemia- wide spread inflammatory response seen in what disease
process?
ARDS (doesn’t respond to O2)
Module 5 objectives
Plan collaborative care for patients experiencing common dysrhythmias.
Describe the physiological process involved in the maintenance and restoration of health
and wellness, across the lifespan, as it relates to Perfusion.
Educate patients and families about current procedures and other interventions for
common dysrhythmias.
Appraise evidence-based practice in the current treatment of cardiac arrest.
o Perfusion
Understand ECG complex – think about what is going on in the heart if there is no P wave with
every QRS, or if a segment lengthens- Blocks
What part of the conduction system of the heart controls the rate? SA node
What wave is not normally seen on ECG? U wave
Common medications – i.e. beta blockers, anticoagulants, calcium channel blockers – know
why prescribed and patient education i.e. take own pulses; what two meds will patient with
afib have long term? Anticoagulant and Cardizem (Calcium channel blocker) Why? Because if
they don’t the patient will be a risk for clots and stroke
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Exam 2
You notice a change in rhythm on patient telemetry – what do you do? Assess patient and
then do a 12 lead and call provider
Treatment for VFib – priority before shock? Defibrillate
Substance abuse cocaine and meth are usually the cause of dysthymias of patient’s 20-40 so
ask if they are doing any illegal drugs
Identify rhythm strips [https://www.practicalclinicalskills.com/ekg-practice-drill]
What treatments would the RN initiate for fatal dysrhythmias? Vfib and vtach
CHF – assessment for physiologic alterations during bradycardia and tachycardia
Asystole- assess patient and check leads if patient is no responsive start compressions
Bradycardia- assess patient and check leads administer atropine
What is normal cardiac output? 6L/min
Pacemaker- patient education? don't lift, stay away from electronics over chest, no mri, pacer
teaching, keep your card with you, where medic alert bracelet, no arms over head, watch for
infection
What patient would need an external pacemaker? Patient who is symptomatic bradycardia
and is waiting for a permanent pacemaker to be put in. Usually the patient that has the 2nd and
3rd degree blocks
ICD- patient education i.e. avoid what? Electromagnetic area because magnets will turn them
off so avoid MRIs
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