Joe
Happy 4th.
On Jul 3, 2009, at 1:12 PM, Ivan Hronek wrote:
You can do that - these don't have to be sophisticated ventilators but usually you can get most patients breathing spontaneously towards the end of the case which then becomes the 'challenge' for us to achieve. Like Jim says, it's all just what you get people used to doing - then they consider that normal. If you get a respiratory tech assigned to PACU with a sufficient amount of circuits and explain the advantages of such an arrangement everyone understands - the administration, the surgeons and the anesthesiologists will all be happier as they get more done in a shorter period of time and the OR becomes more like an efficient surgicenter - look at the smoothness and low level of frustration in those in comparison with regular ORs.
Ivan Hronek MDSo you have enough ventilators in the PACU to cover virtually all of your beds? We extubate in the OR unless the pt is going to stay ventilated, and seldom have more than 2 or 3 vents going at once. Getting any more is a major hassle.
Sanford M. Miller, MD
sanford.miller@nyumc.org
_____________________ _________ __
From: Anesthideas@yahoogroups. [mailto:Anesthideas@com yahoogroups. ] On Behalf Of James DuCantocom
Sent: Friday, July 03, 2009 5:56 AM
Our practice of extubation in the OR vs recovery room is largely dictated by the culture of the institution. The recovery room nurses at my institution are all ICU trained, so they don't flinch when a patient arrives that needs a ventilator or a t-piece.
Jim