Intern Survival Guide (UIC)
Intern Survival Guide (UIC)
Intern Survival Guide (UIC)
Survival Guide
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Welcome to the online Housestaff Survival Guide.
The purpose of this website is to provide residents with quick online access to the all the information in their
housestaff survival manuals, and beyond.
How to use this site:
Use the links on the left to navigate. You can find most of this information in your copy of the Housestaff
Survival Guide. This website combines this guide with links to useful online resources. Heres what you will
find:
Crosscover: common overnight issues, such as chest pain/sob
Specialty: common overnight issues for specialty services, such as heme/onc and sickle cell
Procedures + Calculators: information on interventions such as procedures, O2 and ECGs
Electrolytes: a quick reference for daily electrolyte repletion
Call survival tips: a collection of on-call tips, and more
Phone Numbers: a collection of phone numbers, pagers, tips, and more
Other important sites:
Online ICU Guidebook
UIH Clinical Care Guidelines
New-Innovations
AMION [cards]
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Procedures + Calcs
Pulm
GI
Electrolytes
Phone Numbers
Chest pain
Antibiotics
Tachycardia / Bradycardia
Vancomycin dosing
Shortness of breath
Abdominal pain
Nausea and Vomiting
Neuro
GI Bleeds
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Fever
Hypotension / HTN
Constipation / Diarrhea
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ID
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Other Renal
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CV
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Oliguria
Hyperkalemia
Etoh withdrawal
Seizures
AMS / Sundowning
Death pronouncement
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Always go see the patient, to assess for stability, eliminate doubts and help you figure out what is going on.
PE: all vital signs; BP in each arm and pulses in both arms and legs (aortic dissection)
CV: new murmurs, extra heart sounds, JVP, carotid pulses, sternum/chest wall pain with palpation
Lungs: crackles, decreased breath sounds, hyper-resonant percussion, friction rub, trachea deviation
Abd: tenderness, BS
Ext: Leg edema (CHF, DVT)
Based on your history and physical, continue with further workup.
Diifferential includes: CV (Angina, MI, pericarditis, dissection), Pulm (PE, PTX, PNA, Effusion) GI (Esophageal spasm, rupture, GERD, PUD,
Pancreatitis) MSK (costochondritis, zoster, etc)
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CV
If concern for coronary etiology
What to think/risk stratification
What type of chest pain is it (typical v atypical)? What are his risk factors?
What is his TIMI score?
What to order immediately
Cardiac enzymes + EKG: compare to prior EKG. 3 sets q6hrs
Call senior for ST elevations, LBBB, TWI or any questions
ABG if pulse ox <95% , tachypneic and to calculate A-a gradient;
CXR: look for infiltrate, wide mediastinum, pleural effusion
Aspirin 324mg chewable if no contraindication
If confirmed to be cardiac
Call your senior!
ABCs/ACLS, O2
ASA + nitro + morphine + telemetry
(nitro 0.5mg SL up to 3 doses 5m apart or 1inch topical paste)
(morphine: low dose, can repeat if awake and SBP>90)
If ACS: call cardiology fellow to discuss heparin + plavix, consider CCU
If concerned for aortic dissection:
Check BP on both arms, review mediastinum on CXR, consider CT Angio
If confirmed to be dissection
Call senior! Call CT surgery & vascular surgery!
Transfer to CCU/MICU
Control BP w/labetalol or nitroprusside drips for BP
Pulmonary
If you suspect a PE
What to think/risk stratification
What type of chest pain is it (typical v atypical)? Risk factors?
What are his O2 requirements and vital signs?
What is the patients Wells Score?
What to order immediately
Diagnostics:
CT w/PE protocol, VQ
ABG. R heart strain? (EKG, troponin, BNP)
Therapeutics: empiric anticoagulation until you can r/o
supplemental O2
If you suspect a PTX
CXR upright with inspiration and expiration
If present, and is > 20% of lung: call surgery for chest tube
100% oxygen non-rebreather: improves reabsorption
If tension PTX: 16g IV catheter in 2nd intercostal space,
then chest tube
GI
Al hydroxide (Maalox) 30mL po q4hrs, famotidine 20mg po BID or IV
Elevate HOB
Viscous lidocaine
Other: Write a note; avoid morphine until dx and tx are established
Re-assess as needed
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First: Full set of vitals over the phone. Go to patient. Assess for SHOCK: decreased organ perfusion: brain (mental status), heart (chest pain),
kidneys (urine output <20ml/hr), skin (cold, clammy), absent bowel sounds. Initially, if there are any concerns for shock, ask RN for 2 large IVs, pt
in Trendelenburg, start bolus NS, and get ABG kit to bedside to evaluate acidosis
Hx: compare to pts baseline BP and make sure cuff is appropriately sized.
Is the pt confused or disoriented? Chest pain? Bleeding? h/o infection, allergy, cardiac event? Trauma/surgery/procedure/GI bleed?
Sudden onset? Consider massive PE, tension PTX, major cardiac event
Recent medications? (IV contrast or antibiotics)
PE: Manually re-check vitals
Gen: how sick? Cold/clammy, sweaty, obtunded?
Neck: JVP, tracheal deviation (PTX?)
CV: HR, new murmurs, pulse volume
Lungs: crackles, decreased breath sounds
Abd: tenderness, GI bleeding
Ext: skin temp, cyanosis, cap refill (normal is <2s)
Neuro: Mental status
Dx algorithm: (oversimplified)
cool skin & normal JVD -> hypovolemia
or septic shock
cool skin & increased JVD: -> cardiogenic
warm skin & fever -> sepsis
warm skin, rash, wheeze, stridor -> anaphylaxis
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Management
If pt is asymptomatic and SBP > 90 (and close to patients baseline), let it be.
If concerned about shock, get 2 large IVs, give oxygen, consider foley to monitor UOP,
intubation if obtunded.
Cardiogenic Shock:
- arrhythmias VT, complete heart block, SVT, VF, Afib w/ RVR
- ischemia ST elevation or new LBBB
- Post cath, consider tamponade (Triad: JVD, diminished heart sounds, hypotension; also
tachycardia, narrow pulse pressure and pulsus paradoxus)
- cautious with fluids (except in tamponade fluids needed until pericardiocentesis)
- transfer to CCU or MICU (if any concern for non-cardiology etiology)
Sepsis/anaphylaxis/hypovolemia:
-bolus fluids (e.g. 500ml normal saline) or wide open and assess immediate response
-access: minimum 2 large bore IVs
-anaphylaxis: fluids, epipen (from arrest cart if necessary), then q10-15min PRN; hydrocortisone
250mg IV, diphenhydramine 50mg IV, famotidine 20mg IV (ranitidine at VA)
-sepsis: IV fluids and antibiotics
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Other considerations:
Acute adrenal insufficiency (esp. in pt with h/o Addisons, hypopituitarism, long-term steroids):
give dexamethasone 10mg IV q6hrs, or hydrocortisone 100mg IV q8hrs
If pt is symptomatic or in shock, call your senior, and
consider transfer to MICU/CCU for pressors.
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Hx:
chest pain, palpitations, SOB, previous episodes, h/o cardiac or thromboembolic disease, drug hx (incl. recreational, caffeine,
smoking, alcohol); assess for causes of sinus tach (pain, hypovolemia, infection)
PE:
vitals, mentation, JVP, skin temp/cyanosis, cap refill, heart rate, murmurs, lung crackles and breath sounds
edema or evidence of DVT
Tests:
ECG; consider CBC, glucose, Mg, Ca, Chem, (thyroid)?, ABG if low pulse ox or considering PE, CXR
DDX:
Narrow Complex Tachycardia:
Regular: sinus tach, SVT, atrial flutter
Irregular: atrial fibrillation, MAT, a. flutter w/ variable conduction
Wide Complex Tachycardia:
do not miss V. Fib!
Management: call your senior. if unstable -> shock
-oxygen, telemetry, correct electrolytes (Mg, K), underlying causes (infection, hypovolemia, PE), address management for any
primary arrhythmias
-A FIB: with RVR rate control with diltiazem or beta-blocker if pt is stable
-SVT: may be broken with valsalva, carotid massage (r/o bruits 1st), adenosine 6mg IVP followed by rapid saline flush, then
repeat adenosine 12mg IVP if needed (record on a rhythm strip!!)
-VT without pulse or BP: ACLS management as V. Fib
-NSVT: if infrequent, monomorphic and pt is asymptomatic, check lytes and watch
-MAT: treat pulm disease, rate control (consider CCB like diltiazem, or B-blocker)
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PE:
heart rate, mentation, JVP, cannon waves (heart block), skin temp/cyanosis, cap refill, murmurs,
lung crackles and breath sounds
Tests: EKG. Digoxin level if indicated.
DDX: drugs (beta-blockers, digoxin, CCB, amiodarone); sick sinus; MI; AV block; hyperkalemia;
hypothyroid; hypothermia
Management:
Oxygen, telemetry, correct electrolytes (Mg, K), Call your senior and consider atropine (as above)
Consider pacing and transfer to CCU
If digoxin toxicity: correct K, Mg; talk with senior about digibind antibodies
If B-blocker overdose, may give glucagon 50mcg bolus, then infusion
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First: Full set of vitals over the phone. Onset? Reason for admission in the first place? Order oxygen if hypoxic (goal 88-92% in
CO2 retainers), nebs, ECG, ABG kit to bedside and go see pt now
Hx
sudden onset (PE, PTX, pulmonary edema) vs. gradual onset (pneumonia, COPD/asthma exacerbation, edema or effusion)
h/o lung or heart disease, associated sx (cough, hemoptysis, fever, chest pain), risk factors for PE or MI
PE:
vitals, use of accessory muscles, midline trachea, signs of cyanosis, JVP, lungs, heart, loud P2, RV heave, edema, mental status
(confused, drowsy)
Tests:
ABG, CXR, EKG, CBC. Consider chest CT with PE protocol (bolus w/IVF x 12hrs after dye if pt not overloaded. Patient will need
18g IV access for the contrast dye (often cant use PICC). Generally, cant get V/Q scans at
night/weekends (that goes for both VA & UIC).
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Specialty
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ABG Calculator
A-a Gradient
Wells Criteria for PE
TIMI Score
Chest Pain
Supplemental O2 / NIPPV
Acute chest syndrome
Other: anxiety/pain/opiates/narcotics
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Do not miss:
Hypoxia insufficient tissue oxygenation (look at PO2, goal is above 60)
Anaphylaxis (wheezing, itch/urticaria, hypotension)
Management:
-supplemental oxygen (cannula -> ventimask -> nonrebreather {ICU eval if comes to this})
-BIPAP if obstructive airway disease, or volume overloaded
-nebulizer: albuterol +/- ipratropium
-diuresis: double the home dose (lasix PO:IV is 2:1, bumex is 1:1). Take creatinine and multiply by 20 to ballpark needed
dose for those not on lasix. Can double 1hr later if no urine output, consider lasix ggt or metolazone.
-check peak flows if asthma, culture sputum if present
-if narcotic overdose, give naloxone 0.2 to 2mg IV
-anaphylaxis: epi 0.3cc of 1:1000epi SC (3cc of 1:10000epi IV if accompanying shock), hydrocortisone 250mg
IVPB, Benadryl 25-50mg IVPB, Famotidine
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PE:
serial abd exams, look for peritoneal signs, rebound tenderness (pain w/ percussion of abd)
(Unlikely to be peritoneal if pt can cough, laugh, sit up or roll, or if not bothered when you nudge the bed)
Abd: Bowel sounds (high with SBO, absent with ileus), percussion tympany, shifting dullness,
palpation guarding, rebound, Murphys, psoas, obturator, CVA tenderness
Consider rectal or pelvic exam
Tests: consider CBC, Chem, amylase/lipase, ABG, anion gap, lactic acid, LFTs, UA, INR if suspect
liver disease or sepsis. Also consider bHCG, cultures, type&cross
Studies: Flat and upright KUB (abdominal obstructive series) and upright CXR
Have films read by radiology resident; look for dilated toxic megacolon (>7cm); air under
diaphragm or between viscera and subcutaneous tissue on lat decub; air/fluid levels suggesting
obstruction; gallstone or pancreas calcifications
consider abdominal CT or US, (no oral contrast if obstructed), EKG
DDX
-Do not miss: acute abdomen: AAA rupture, bowel perforation, ascending cholangitis, acute
appendicitis, mesenteric ischemia, incarcerated hernia (happens every once in a while)
-myocardial infarction
-shock (hypovolemia or sepsis),spontaneous bacterial peritonitis
Management
If acute abdomen, notify general surgery. If not acute abdomen, continue serial abdominal exams & document them.
NPO, give IVF, hold analgesics while evaluating.
If suspect obstruction: NPO, place NGT (with low-intermittent suction), serial abd exams q2 hours,
(consider famotidine or ranitidine H2-blockers)
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DDx:
Medications NSAIDs, erythromycin, morphine, codeine, aminophylline, chemo, digoxin,
antiarrhythmics, nicotine, bromocriptine
Infection gastroenteritis, otitis media, pharyngitis, CNS, pneumonia
Gut disorder obstruction, PUD, gastroparesis, hepatobiliary, pancreatic, cancer
CNS increased ICP, migraine, seizure, anxiety, bulimia/anorexia, pain
Other MI, metabolic, pregnancy, drugs/alcohol, radiation sickness, Labyrinthine disorders
Tx:
PO if mild, IV if severe
Promethazine (Phenergan) 12.5-25mg po/IV q4-6h (sedating)
Prochlorperazine (Compazine) 5-10mg IV/PO/IM q4-6h PRN, or suppository 25mg bid
Metoclopramide (Reglan) 10mg PO/IV q6h prn (not with obstruction)
Ondansetron (Zofran) 4mg IV (esp with chemo)
Tx of GI upset: PUD, reflux: Maalox (aluminum hydroxide/magnesium hydroxide) 30-60mL
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Labs: Consider cbc, lytes, stool for fecal leuks, culture and sens, heme occult, O&P if pt had diarrhea at admission or within first 3
days of admission, C. diff PCR (x1)
DDx: infection, GI bleed (blood is a stimulant), ischemia, fecal impation with overflow, laxatives, abx, antacids with mag
Tx: IVF hydration with serial monitoring and correction of electrolytes if any abnormalities. Consider empiric metrondiazole or
vancomycin if strongly suspecting C diff. Generally no anti-motility agents until infection is ruled out.
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PE: check orthostatics (if positive >20% volume loss), mentation, abd masses, hepatomegaly, skin temp and cap refill, rectal exam
ATLS has developed a good assessment for hemorrhage and corresponding classification. This is useful to estimate blood-loss. A loss of
0-15% is considered a class I hemorrhage. A delay in capillary refill of longer than 3 seconds corresponds to a volume loss of
approximately 10%. Usually no changes in VS occur in this stage.
Class II hemorrhage corresponds to 15-30%. VS will change in this stage, usually postural tachycardia will occur first, can be seen
w/500cc blood loss. Further VS changes will continue as the bleeding worsens. Class III (30-40% loss) and IV (>40%) become more life
threatening, and sympathetic compensatory mechanisms are more visible (tachy, clammy skin, oliguria).
Tests: type and cross, CBC, chem, coags
DDx:
Upper GI: esophageal varices, Mallory-Weiss tear, PUD, esophagitis, aortoenteric fistula, neoplasm
Lower GI: diverticulitis, colorectal ca/polyps, hemorrhoids, angiodysplasia, Meckels diverticulum
Management:
*IV access (min. two 18-gauge IVs)*
Place NG tube for NG Lavage: (15% of hematochezia (thought to be a LGIB) is a really bad UGIB)
If stable, get serial hemoglobins (q6-q8hr), give IVF, keep NPO
If unstable, fluid resuscitate aggressively, transfuse blood, call GI fellow, transfer to MICU
Reverse coagulation defects if actively bleeding plts, vit K, FFP
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Glasgow score
Ransons criteria
Upper GI:
place NGT, start octreotide and PPI for variceal bleed (lansoprazole 30mg at UIC; omeprazole 40mg at the VA,
consider IV esomeprazole -> need to put in nonformulary medication),
call GI (may need EGD)
Lower GI:
tagged RBC or IR embolization if active bleeding
Monitor UOP and evidence of shock; Give Fluid!!
Call your senior; call GI fellow, May need MICU.
Variceal bleeding
give pantoprazole IV (refer to pharmacy guidelines), octreotide & antibiotics
If uremic bleeding, can consider DDAVP (0.3micrograms/kg IV at 12-24hrs) in dialysis or renal failure pts.
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Normal: 0.5cc/kg/hr, oliguria: <500cc/day, anuria: <50 cc/day
**anuria is most often seen in two conditions: shock & complete bilateral urinary tract obstruction**
FENa calculator
Hx
FEUrea calculator
vital signs, amount of urine in last 24hrs/last 8hrs, flush/replace Foley, review I/Os over past few
days, recent procedure with contrast, any new meds (ACE-I can cause AKI, anticholinergics like benadryl,
general anesthesia can cause retention), most recent lytes (BUN, Cr, HCO3, K)
PE
Orthostatics, weight changes, JVD, friction rub, crackles, skin turgor, ascites, enlarged bladder
Tests: bladder scan. UA. Check urine electrolytes AND urine creatinine (these need to be ordered separately) to calc FENa
Calculate FeUrea if patient is on diuretics
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Management:
1) R/o Urinary Retention: bladder scan. Foley; or try a Coude catheter to pass enlarged prostate; beware of post-obstruction diuresis;
replace lost fluids. If theres a problem with a suprapubic catheter -> call senior and then urology resident
2) Determine volume status
If dry, pre-renal -> fluid challenge with 250-500cc of normal saline, followed by maintenance (caution with heart failure)
If wet, CHF -> diuresis with Lasix; (escalating doses); add metolazone PO; if no response, may need nesiritide or dobutamine (if need
inotrope). If contrast-induced nephropathy -> (up to 2 days post-contrast), ensure adequate hydration
Follow clin chem.: do not miss hyperkalemia with renal failure
N.B. It is poor form to give both fluids and lasix!!
Additional measures with renal failure: stop nephrotoxic meds: NSAIDs, ACE-I (if new addition), aminoglycosides; stop digoxin,
metformin, check vanc level. Consider renal u/s (wont get done in the middle of the night, but you can place the order)
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Emergent dialysis: AEIOU -> i.e. indications for a stat renal consult (call your senior)
Acidosis, EKG changes from hyperkalemia, Intoxication, overloaded with fluid (refractory to lasix), Uremia with pericarditis or
encephalopathy
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Management: If there are ECG changes, call your senior, then proceed in this order:
-calcium gluconate 10% 10mL IV (1 amp) over 2-3 minutes (cardiac protection. Avoid w/ digoxin)
-Insulin 10-20 units IV with glucose 50gms to prevent hypoglycemia
-B-agonist -> albuterol nebs
-NaHCO3 1 amp IV if severe metabolic acidosis (avoid in ESRD as huge osmotic load)
-Diuretics: furosemide 40mg IV if renal function adequate
-Kayexalate (sodium polystyrene sulfonate) 15-45gms PO or as enema (not in the critically ill)
-Dialysis
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PE:
current vitals; mental status, agitation, lethargy; photophobia, neck stiffness, pulse volume
Brudzinskis sign: flex the neck; if pts hips and legs flex, its positive
Kernigs sign: flex hip and knee; if straightening the leg causes pain/resistance, its positive
Skin temp and color (hot and flushed with septic vasodilation; cold and clammy if hypotensive)
Look for sources, including wounds, rashes, cellulitis, DVT, line infections
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Antimicrobials
Neutropenic fever
UIH Abx Guidelines
UIH PNA Guidelines
UIH VAP Guidelines
Tests:
2 complete sets of Blood Cultures, including peripheral culture and culture from each lumen of central lines (label the samples!)
see technique below;
UA and UCx, CXR PA and Lat if stable (portable if not), sputum culture, consider stool studies (C.diff PCR) Head CT if any neuro
signs, LP if concern for meningitis, diagnostic paracentesis in pt with ascites
DDx:
Infection (lung, UTI, wounds, IV sites, CNS, abd, pelvic), PE and DVT, Drug-fever, neoplasm, atelectasis, septic shock, meningitis
Hidden sources: AEIOU: abscess, endocarditis, IV catheters, osteomyelitis, UTI (foley)
Recall 5Ws of Postop Fever:
Wind: atelectasis (POD 1-2, doesnt really cause a fever by itself), pneumonia, PE
Water: UTI
Wound: IV line or wound infxn POD 5-7
Walking: DVT, PE, thrombophlebitis
Wonder drugs: drug fever
Management:
-If pt is stable, make the diagnosis before starting abx.
-If pt is unstable, neutropenic, or you are concerned for meningitis, start abx right away and find your senior
- D/c foley and lines if NOT needed, but ensure IV access and give IVF.
- Fever + hypotension = septic shock: aggressive IVF; broad spectrum Abx, pressors
If suspected Meningitis (headache, seizure, change in sensorium, neck-ache)
- get blood cultures and LP, then Abx; if there is any delay in getting the LP
- start empiric abx NOW and dexamethasone10mg IV stat and q6h x4 (for bacterial meningitis) and do LP within 3 hours
- Antibiotics for bacterial meningitis: Ceftriaxone +/- vanc for S. pneumo and N. meningitides
If age > 50y, add ampicillin as well for Listeria
If immunocompromised: ampicillin and ceftazidime
If trauma/shunt: vanc and ceftazidime
Pseudomonal coverage monotherapy: cefipime, zosyn, or ceftazidime
If already on these or unstable add gent, tobra, amikacin OR ciprofloxacin to double cover
Consider fungal if already covering GPC, GNR, and anaerobes (but dont treat asymptomatic candiduria, likely colonization)
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Neutropenic fever
UIH Abx Guidelines
UIH PNA Guidelines
UIH VAP Guidelines
Vancomycin dosing
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Antimicrobials
UIH Abx Guidelines
UIH PNA Guidelines
UIH VAP Guidelines
UIH Vanc Guidelines
For more information of Vancomycin dosing, check micromedx and/or UIC Clinical Care guidelines for Vancomycin use
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Hx/PE
The CIWA-Ar score can help you assess the patient and guide your treatment
Tx: If pt agitated -> frontload w/ ativan IV 2mg q5min or diazepam IV 5-10mg q5min until calm.
- Sedation with benzodiazepines: consider starting lorazepam 2mg IV/IM q2h (hold if pt asleep), and
titrate as needed large doses may be required, but the bottom line is that if the patient is still
agitated, you are not giving enough benzo.
-may consider diazepam if need higher doses of rapid-onset, long-acting bzd; then may convert 24hr
requirements to longer-acting chlordiazepoxide (Librium)
- Thiamine 100mg IV/IM (Give the thiamine before glucose!)
- Correct K, Mg, Phos, glucose (after giving thiamine)
- Banana Bag (D5W with MVI 1mg; thiamine 100mg, folate 1mg, +/- magnesium)
- Seizures: if generalized convulsions; give diazepam 2.5mg/min IV until controlled, check lytes
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Labs: accucheck; clin chem., Ca, mag, phos; also consider ABG, urine tox, serum tox, UA, EtOH
level, drug levels; (can also consider prolactin level after seizure)
If seizure is over: assess pt, labs, meds, diagnoses, consider head CT; treat the underlying cause
Management
-airway: oxygen, ready to intubate
-lorazepam 4mg drawn up: push 2mg slowly follow by other 2mg if needed (0.1mg/kg is textbook required dose)
(have ambu bag available b/c benzodiazepines can cause respiratory depression)
-call neuro resident to discuss loading of antiepileptics
-status epilepticus if >5min or 2 seizures with incomplete recovery ->involve ICU, neuro, anesthesia
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PE:
vitals; O2sat; accucheck; mentation, pupils (pinpoint pupils suggests opiate o.d.), papilledema,
nuchal rigidity, ascites/jaundice/liver ds, focal neuro findings, asterixis, seizure activity
Tests
CBC, Clin Chem, Ca, Mg, Phos, ABG, TSH, LFTs, ammonia
Noncontrast CT if concern for bleeding or CVA
Cultures, LP for infections
EtOH, tox screen
Sundowning
-Address underlying conditions; r/o delirium which can be an ominous
sign; stop benzodiazepines which can precipitate sundowning
-First try to reorient pt, turn off lights and TV, may encourage family
member to stay with pt
If sedation is necessary:
Risperidone 0.5mg PO/IM/dissolving tablets
Seroquel (quetiapine) 25mg PO (less sedating)
Haloperidol (Haldol) 0.25mg PO/IM; increase to 1-5mg if needed
(caution due to anticholinergic, orthostatic, urinary retention,
extrapyramidal side effects; also, reduce the dose in LIVER PTS)
Management:
Hypovolemia hang 1L NS
Low blood sugar 1amp D50
Hypoxia facemask, CXR, ABG (DDx PE, aspiration, volume overload)
Seizure suction, lorazepam, oxygen, monitor, protect airway
Trauma or CVA stat head CT (without contrast)
If suspect meningitis: start empiric abx, fundoscopic/neuro exam (or head CT), followed by LP
If alcohol withdrawal: give lorazepam 2mg IV q2-4hrs scheduled, with 1mg PRN (increase as
needed); give thiamine first, then glucose
If overdosed on pain meds (i.e. too much morphine): give naloxone 0.4mg IVP
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Dx:
(1) elevated glucose on clin chem.
(2) serum ketones specific, urine ketones sensitive
(3) pH <7.3 or HCO3 <22, presence of anion gap
Precipitants: infection, inadequate insulin, diet, pancreatitis
Tx: aggressive fluids (caution with CHF), insulin IV and then consider a drip, call your senior
Do not miss: HONK hyper-osmolar non-ketotic state (type II diabetes mellitus)
Dx: hyperglycemia, not acidotic, no ketones in urine, raised calculated osmolality= 2(Na+K) + BUN/2.8 + glucose/18
Precipitants: MI, infection (pneumonia, UTI, cellulitis, gastroenteritis), stroke, dehydration,
exogenous corticosteroids
Tx: aggressive fluids (caution with CHF), insulin IV and then consider a drip, call your senior
Note: Common cause of hyperglycemia is holding insulin for NPO studies. This is an error: pts on insulin should receive at least 1/3 -1/2 of
their basilar insulin even if NPO.
HYPOGLYCEMIA
Causes
do not miss *SEPSIS* (may precede sepsis and decompensation); decreased PO intake, renal insufficiency (not clearing insulin); reactive postprandial, etoh, liver disease, adrenal insufficiency, hypopituitarism, severe malnutrition, insulinoma
Tx
- give juice, or 1amp of D50; If severe (i.e. symptomatic) and no IV access, give glucagon 1.0mg SQ or IM
-consider holding or decreasing the next scheduled dose of insulin or oral med
-be aware that low BS can precipitate seizures.
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RASH
1) r/o anaphylaxis -> associated with SOB, wheezing, laryngeal edema, hypotension, rash/urticaria
-large bore IVs for IVF
-Epinephrine 0.5mg as above
-Diphenhydramine 50mg IV/IM; Hydrocortisone 250mg IV; intubation if needed
2) drug rash -> hold suspected, non-essential meds
diphenhydramine 25-50mg po q6-8h, loratadine 10mg po if itching
caution with steroid creams that can increase skin breakdown and risk of Infection
Remember that fever may be only manifestation of drug reaction
3) associated with blood transfusion -> stop the blood, send remainder for blood bank analysis
benadryl and APAP if stable
epinephrine 0.5-1.0mL (1:1,000) IM, hydrocortisone 250mg IV & intubation as well if needed
IVF: 500-1000ml of NS bolus
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Diagnosis
When evaluating patient, use a standardized scale to assess the level of pain and for subsequent assessments. If you are evaluating a sickle
cell patient, it is likely that this patient knows her baseline pain level or where it was earlier during the day.
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Management
Schedule pain meds then write patient may refuse, or hold if sedated
NSAIDs are good for musculoskeletal pain, pleuritic pain, gout
Avoid NSAIDS if: pt has renal insufficiency, is anticoagulated (relative contraindication), low platelets, h/o active PUD or GI bleed, CHF (can
cause sodium retention), has ASA sensitivity/bronchospasm/nasal polyps, caution with ACE/ARBs
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Patients Floor:
Talk w/ nurse about what happened.
Was the Attending called?
Autopsy desired?
Organ donation?
Review chart for other med/family issues
In the Room:
Explain the purpose of the pronouncement to family.
Ask if family wishes to be present, Also, ask if family would like the chaplain to be present
Address any questions from family.
Pronouncement:
ID pt.
Note that the patient is NOT hypothermic (not dead until you are warm and dead).
Note general appearance of pt and if any spontaneous movement. There may be some twitching.
Note no rxn to verbal or tactile stimulation.
Note no pupillary light reflex (pupils should be fixed/dilated).
Note no breathing or lung sounds or heart beat/pulse
**when to call coroner: if pt was in hospital <24hrs, death w/ unusual circumstances, or if death was
associated w/ trauma regardless of cause of death**
Orders to be done.
1. Expiration order on Powerchart.
2. Fill out paper documentation.
2. Call Gift of Hope ROBI (regardless if organ donor or not) -630.758.2600, www.robi.org
Documentation---What to write in your death note:
Called to bedside by RN to pronounce pts name or Code blue called at time. Resuscitation efforts
stopped at time.
Template Death note
Use the note below. Modify to represent specific case.
DEATH NOTE
<Document all above findings here. What happened? Document time.>
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No spontaneous movements were present. There was not response to verbal or tactile stimuli. Pupils were mid-dilated and fixed. No breath
sounds were appreciated over either lung field. No carotid pulses were palpable. No heart sounds were auscultator over entire precordium.
Patient pronounced dead at date & time. Family and resident (or attending physician) were notified. Document if coroner was notified. The
family accepts/declines autopsy. The family accepts/declines organ donation. Document if pt was DNR/DNI vs. Full code.
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Tumor lysis syndrome
Transfusions
Hepatic encephalopathy
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Management
Send BCx s 2, urine Cx, +/- CXR
Cefepime , add aminoglycoside (gentamicin here) if renal fxn ok [aztreonam and gent if PCN allergic]
Add VANC for hypotension, sepsis, mucositis, catheter infxn, MRSA
Order antibiotics and call pharmD on call to help you get them hanging STAT
If pt continues to be febrile after 3d (& w/o etiology found)-> consider chest CT, ID consult
**after 5d -> add voriconazole 6mg/kg q12 x 2 doses, then 200mg po q12
**>6d -> consider switching to imipenem/cilastatin
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Vancomycin dosing
UIH Abx Guidelines
UIH PNA Guidelines
UIH VAP Guidelines
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Management
- Considered a medical emergency
- Contact your senior
- Aggressive IV hydration
- Consider medical management with the following:
- Rasburicase 0.2 mg/kg IV over 30 minutes daily for up to 5 days; do not dose beyond 5 days or administer more than 1
course of treatment
- Allopurinol
Adults: 200 to 400 mg/m2/day IV daily or in divided doses OR 600 to 900 mg/day orally; reduce dose by half after 3 to 4
days ; titrate dose to level of serum uric acid desired
- Sodium Bicarbonate / Sodium Chloride / Dextrose
Isotonic sodium bicarbonate in 0.45% normal saline with 5% dextrose infused at a rate of 150 to 300 mL/hour to keep
urine pH>7 (discontinue when uric acid level is normal)
-Closely monitor UO
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Labs: send remaining blood product and a new pt blood sample to the blood bank: test for crossmatch,
Coombs test, CBC, Clin chem., DIC panel, total bilirubin and indirect bilirubin
Check UA for free Hb (i.e. +ve blood, 0 rbc)
Allergic/Anaphylaxis (Nonhemolytic reaction): urticaria/hives, hypotension, fever >40, wheezing,
bronchospasm, laryngeal edema,
Management:
- STOP transfusion; send blood to lab as above
- Epinephrine 0.5-1.0mL (1:1,000) IM
- Benadryl (diphenhydramine 25-50mg PO/IV)
- Hydrocortisone 250mg IV
- IVF: 500-1000ml of NS bolus
- Intubation if needed
Fever:
<40 (1-2% of transfusions): Non-hemolytic Reaction; due to bodys immune rxn to WBC
(i.e. in pt with prior transfusions or pregnancies)
Management: Acetaminophen 650mg po, diphenhydramine 50mg po; slow down the blood; r/o infection, r/o
hemolytic rxn; monitor
SOB:
noncardiogenic pulmonary edema: TRALI transfusion-related acute lung injury, TACO transfusion associated cardiac overload
Management: CXR, ventilatory support, diuresis
decrease rate of transfusion, give 20-40mg furosemide IV
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Management
Immediately give supplemental O2
Stat CXR 2 views, portable if unstable
Stat CBC, type and cross.
Goal HgB of 10, or very near patients baseline. Achieve with simple transfusion if possible, otherwise need exchange transfusion
Start levofloxacin
Work-up for what you believe to be the underlying etiology
Call your senior. Might have to contact attending, ICU.
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Fever
Chest Pain
Acute chest syndrome
Supplemental O2 / NIPPV
ABG Calculator
A-a Gradient
Wells Criteria for PE
TIMI Score
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- RULE OUT OTHER CAUSES AND ASSESS FOR PRECIPITATING CAUSES
- Initiate infectious workup
-Assess for other causes of mental status changes
-Remember that liver patients bleed, consider SCANNING THE HEAD
- Assess if patient can protect airway (gag reflex?)
- Lactulose (via NG tube, Oral if alert/awake, or rectal)
- 30-45 mL (20 g/30 mL) orally 3-4 times daily; adjust every 1-2 days to achieve 2-3 soft formed stools/day OR 300 mL (200 g) in 700
mL of water or saline rectally as a retention enema every 4-6 hours as needed; retain enema for 30-60 minutes
-Rifaximin 200mg Orally
-If occurring in setting of fulminant hepatic failure, can be due to cerebral edema, and lactulose will not help you in this case.
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HE calculator
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GI
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MELD Score
CVC/Central Line
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Electrolytes
Pulm
Arterial Line
Heparin dosing
Argatroban dosing
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Indications:
Venous access is needed for intravenous fluids or
antibiotics and a peripheral site is unavailable or not
suitable
Central venous pressure measurement
Administration of certain chemotherapeutic drugs or total
parenteral nutrition (TPN)
For hemodialysis or plasmapheresis
Contraindications:
Uncooperative patient
Uncorrected bleeding diathesis
Skin infection over the puncture site
Distortion of anatomic landmarks from any reason
Pneumothorax or hemothorax on the contralateral side
Supplies:
CVC kit
Portable/Bedside Ultrasound
Method:
Read the following document:: NEJMCVC Placement
Procedure video: NEJM Videos in Clinical Medicine > CVC
Placement
Complications:
Pneumothorax (3-30%)
Hemopneumothorax
Hemorrhage
Hypotension due to a vasovagal response
Pulmonary edema due to lung re expansion
Spleen or liver puncture
Air embolism
Infection
PROCEDURE TEMPLATE
PROCEDURE:
Internal jugular central venous catheter, U/S guided.
INDICATION:
PROCEDURE OPERATOR:
CONSENT:
PROCEDURE SUMMARY:
A time-out was performed. The patient's <LEFT/RIGHT> neck region was
prepped and draped in sterile fashion using chlorhexidine scrub.
Anesthesia was achieved with 1% lidocaine. The <LEFT/RIGHT> internal
jugular vein was accessed under ultrasound guidance using a finder
needle and sheath. U/S images were permanently documented. Venous
blood was withdrawn and the sheath was advanced into the vein and
the needle was withdrawn. A guidewire was advanced through the
sheath. A small incision was made with a 10 blade scalpel and the sheath
was exchanged for a dilator over the guidewire until appropriate dilation
was obtained. The dilator was removed and an 8.5 French central
venous quad-lumen catheter was advanced over the guidewire and
secured into place with 4 sutures at <__> cm. At time of procedure
completion, all ports aspirated and flushed properly. Post-procedure xray shows the tip of the catheter within the superior vena cava.
COMPLICATIONS:
ESTIMATED BLOOD LOSS:
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Indications:
Continuous monitoring of blood pressure, for patients
with hemodynamic instability
For reliable titration of supportive medications such as
pressors/inotropes/antihypertensive infusions.
For frequent arterial blood sampling.
PROCEDURE TEMPLATE
Contraindications:
Placement should not compromise the circulation distal
to the placement site
Do not place if Raynauds, Thrombangitis obliterans, or
other active issues.
Do not place if active infection or trauma at the site
PROCEDURE OPERATOR:
Supplies:
A-line kit
Sterile equipment
Method:
Read the following document:: NEJMA line Placement
Procedure video: NEJM Videos in Clinical Medicine > A
line Placement
PROCEDURE:
Radial artery line placement. (A-line)
INDICATION:
CONSENT:
PROCEDURE SUMMARY:
The patient was prepped and draped in the usual sterile manner using
chlorhexidine scrub. 1% lidocaine was used to numb the region. The
<LEFT/RIGHT> radial artery was palpated and successfully cannulated on
the first pass. Pulsatile, arterial blood was visualized and the artery was
then threaded using the Seldinger technique and a catheter was then
sutured into place. Good wave-form was obtained. The patient tolerated
the procedure well without any immediate complications. The area was
cleaned and Tegaderm was applied. Dr. ____ was present during the
entire procedure.
ESTIMATED BLOOD LOSS:
Complications:
Arterial spasm
Bleeding
Infection
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Na Correction
Anion Gap Calculator
ABG Calculator
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- Precise administration of O2
- Usual preset values of FiO2 of 24%, 28%, 31%, 35%, 49% and 50%
Nonrebreathing mask
- 0.80 to 0.90 FiO2
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How to assess an ABG
Indications:
Pleural effusion which needs diagnostic work-up
Symptomatic treatment of a large pleural effusion
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Contraindications:
Uncooperative patient
Uncorrected bleeding diathesis
Chest wall cellulitis at the site of puncture
Bullous disease, e.g. emphysema
Positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) mechanical
ventilation
Only one functioning lung
Small volume of fluid (less than 1 cm thickness on a
lateral decubitus film)
Supplies:
Thoracentesis kit
Bedside US Machine
Method:
Read the following document: NEJM > Thoracentesis
Procedure video: NEJM Videos in Clinical Medicine >
Thoracentesis
Complications:
Pneumothroax
Hemothorax
Arrhythmias
Air embolism
Introduction of infection
PROCEDURE TEMPLATE
PROCEDURE:
Thoracentesis, U/S guided.
INDICATION:
Large pleural effusion.
PROCEDURE OPERATOR:
CONSENT:
Consent was obtained from the patient prior to the procedure.
Indications, risks, and benefits were explained at length.
PROCEDURE SUMMARY:
A time out was performed. The patient was prepped and draped in a
sterile manner using chlorhexidine scrub after the appropriate level was
percussed and confirmed by ultrasound. U/S images were permanently
documented. 1% lidocaine was used to numb the region. A finder needle
was then used to attempt to locate fluid; however, a 22-gauge, 3 1/2inch spinal needle was required to actually locate fluid. Fluid was
aspirated on the second attempt only after completely hubbing the
spinal needle. Clear yellow fluid was obtained. A 10-blade scalpel used
to make the incision. The thoracentesis catheter was then threaded
without difficulty. The patient had 1200 mL of clear yellow fluid
removed. No immediate complications were noted during the
procedure. Dr. _____ was present during the entire procedure. A postprocedure chest x-ray is pending at the time of this dictation. The fluid
will be sent for several studies.
ESTIMATED BLOOD LOSS:
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Contraindications:
Uncooperative patient, uncorrected bleeding diathesis, acute
abdomen that requires surgery
intra-abdominal adhesions, distended bowel, abdominal wall
cellulitis at the site of puncture, pregnancy.
Supplies:
This will vary at your site (JBVA/UIC). There are kits available at
both institution. In general, this is waht you need:
16 G Angiocath (or a spinal needle) x 1
10 cc syringe x 1
Thoracentesis kit tubing x 2
Sterile gloves x 2
Betadine swab x 3
Sterile drape x 2
4x4 sterile gauze x 4
Band-aid x 1
If therapeutic paracentesis:
One-liter vacuum bottle, bags currently at the VA.
Proper tubing and wall suction kit
Method:
Read the following document: NEJM Paracentesis
Procedure video: NEJM Videos in Clinical Medicine >
Paracentesis
What to send fluid for:
cell count with diff (PMN > 250 = SBP) (lavender top)
culture (fill each blood culture bottle (2) with 10cc of fluid)
gram stain (separate syringe or tube, positive smear = SBP)
LDH, protein, albumin, amylase (gold top tube)
Cytology (send as much as you can fill a sterile jug)
SAAG
Calculate the serum-ascites albumin gradient (SAAG): subtract
ascitic albumin from serum albumin
If > 1.1g/dl -> portal hypertension. Send fluid protien.
If < 1.1g/dl -> not portal HTN and less likely to have SBP
(Note if hemorrhagic, subtract 1 PMN for every 250 RBCs)
PROCEDURE TEMPLATE
PROCEDURE:
<Diagnostic?/Therapeutic?> paracentesis
INDICATION:
PROCEDURE OPERATOR:
CONSENT:
Informed consent was obtained after risks and benefits were explained
at length.
PROCEDURE SUMMARY:
A time-out was performed. The area of the <LEFT/RIGHT> abdomen was
prepped and draped in a sterile fashion using chlorhexidine scrub. 1%
lidocaine was used to numb the region. The skin was incised 1.5 mm
using a 10 blade scalpel. The paracentesis catheter was inserted and
advanced with negative pressure under ultrasound guidance. Ultrasound
images were permanently documented. No blood was aspirated. Clear
yellow fluid was retrieved and collected. Approximately 65 mL of ascitic
fluid was collected and sent for laboratory analysis. The catheter was
then connected to the vaccutainer and <__> liters of additional ascitic
fluid were drained. The catheter was removed and no leaking was noted.
50 g of albumin was intravenously during the procedure. The patient
tolerated the procedure well without any immediate complications. Dr.
____ was present during the procedure.
ESTIMATED BLOOD LOSS:
COMPLICATIONS: none
Complications:
Persistent leak from the puncture site
Abdominal wall hematoma
Perforation of bowel
Introduction of infection
Hypotension after a large-volume paracentesis
Dilutional hyponatremia
Hepatorenal syndrome
Major blood vessel laceration
Catheter fragment left in the abdominal wall or cavity
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Lytes
Guidelines for Electrolyte Replacement (in patients with normal
renal function)
Magnesium (replace Mg before K)
1.6-1.8 mEq/L -> 2 grams MgSO4 IVPB (i.e. 8mEq)
1.2-1.5 mEq/L -> 4 grams MgSO4 IVPB (i.e. 16mEq)
< 1.2 mEq/L -> 4 grams MgSO4 IVPB and re-check in 4h
If there are sx of bronchospasm, EKG changes, can give 2 grams
over 15 min.
If asymptomatic, give no faster than 8mEq/hr
Calcium:
8.0-8.5 and alb > 3.5 (or ionized Ca 3.5-4.0) -> 1 gram Ca
gluconate (4.5mEq) over 15-30min
< 8.0 and alb > 3.5 (or ionized Ca < 3.5) -> 2 grams Ca gluconate
(9mEq) over 30 min and recheck in 2hrs
If albumin is < 3.5: Ca (corrected) = (4 serum albumin) x 0.8 +
Ca(measured)
Phosphate:
2.6-3.0 and K < 3.5-4.0 -> K-phosphate 15mmol IVPB (= 22mEq of
phos)
2.6-3.0 but K > 4.0 -> Sodium phosphate 15mmol IVPB (= 22mEq
of phos)
1.5-2.5 and K < 3.5 -> K-phosphate 30mmol IVPB and page senior
< 1.5, give phosphate as above, check all lytes
Max phosphate is 5mmol/hr or can cause decrease in Mg, Ca and
EKG changes
-can also give packets of Neutra-phos or Neutra-phos-potassium
orally (NB both contain sodium)
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Tips for UIH
Tips for JBVA
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Cafeterias
VA inpatient cafeteria hours: Breakfast 6:30-9:00am; Lunch 11:30-1:30pm; Dinner 4:30-6:30pm
VA general cafeteria hours: 7-10am and 10:30-2pm
VA canteen-shop hours: 9-4pm
UIH cafeteria hours: M-F 6:30am-7pm. Weekend/Holiday: 7am-6pm
Jive-Caf = 24 hours
Pagers
If your pager is broken, you can exchange it at Suite 1300 in UIH; first floor, near cafeteria (same
room as the Gemini training lab).
Lost pagers must be reported to the medicine office; the charge is $125
Pager batteries: hospital no longer giving them out. Ask UIH chief or JB. In a pinch, get from MICU or nursing office (1500)
Recycle your old batteries on 6W or give them to UIH chief
Security at night
-When you are at the VA, security can escort you to the University parking garage.
-UIH has free emergency auto assistance available 24 hours: tire inflation, fuel assistance, lock-outs, escorts, dead battery charging. Phone
355-0555
Coats
Location: Laundry Services in Basement of UIH
Hours: posted on the door
-Unisex coats available in basement of UIH Environmental Services. May exchange your coat for clean one. Can also get scrubs for call.
-VA instituted new policy that does not allow people to enter or exit hospital with scrubs to help with infection control.
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Echo Reports: usually read in the afternoon; the echo reading room (x38663) in on the second floor
(on the way to the parking garage); if the echo has already been read, you can go to the office next
door and ask the secretary to show you or copy the hand-written report. Or call the Echo office
(60327) and ask when the report will be in Gemini (usually the following day).
Blood transfusions:
1. Get Consent 2. Type and Cross (expires after 72hrs) 3. Under Lab, order Release of Blood Products, and under Nursing, order
Transfuse Blood Products & Blood Component Ordering
Laboratory
Specimens need to have a sticker with the patient information AND a paper requisition that you
print from Gemini.
Labs: tube specimens to station #620;
Blood Bank: If you need to pick up blood products for a patient, go to the third floor blood bank
is near the anesthesia offices (if you find yourself entering the OR, you are going the wrong
direction!)
Pathology this is where you take Cytology Specimens also on the third floor, just past the blood
bank. It is generally best to drop off cytology specimens yourself. If no one is there (e.g. at night), it
warrants a quick call the next day to ensure they received the specimen.
Tech Support:
Tech support (24hrs/d): 37717
Medication Assistance Program: -to assist patients who have trouble affording meds
Call MAP: 6-5083; MAP intake (Naomi) 6-7235
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VA PAGING
To page someone from Northwestern, call 695-XXXX
To page a VA pager, call 5 # #, then the pager number
ORDERS
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Admission checklist
There will be ONE X-cover pager for teams VA1, VA2,
(1) Admit order
VA3, VA8 -> the 1-2-3-8 pager 389-3071
(2) Orders > diet/vitals/telemetry
There will be ONE X-cover pager for teams VA4, VA5,
(3) Medication reconciliation
VA6, VA 7 -> the 4-5-6-7 pager 389-3611
(4) CPR note
(5) Admission note
***IF from the ER > delayed orders
***IF from another floor > right-click/renew/leave unsigned until reaches floor
***Do not copy to new
Discharge Checklist:
(1) write the Discharge order
(2) Discharge Instructions
(3) Order medications from pharmacy (as early as possible to get them ready)
*For patients going to nursing homes, they often need a 3-day supply of meds to accompany patients
(check with your discharge planner)
Blood transfusions:
1. Get Consent; 2. Type and Cross (expires after 72hrs); 3. Write a nursing order to transfuse the
number and type of units you need
LABORATORY
Specimens need to have a sticker with the patients name, social security number, and ORDER #
(which you obtain on Gui after signing your order on the computer). No paper requisition needed.
Labs: there is no tube system; you must hand-deliver specimens to the Lab on the 4th floor. Place
blood cultures in the incubator just ask for help.
Blood Bank: On the fourth floor (on your left hand side before you get to the laboratory just past
the sliding doors).
Pathology: same location as the laboratory.
Lab at Hines (for results of send-out tests): 21311, 21313
Note that the liver profile does not include AST nor protein/albumin; order these separately or you
can also order a Chem 12 and then select the tests you want.
FOOD
Cafeteria on 3rd floor Damen > free food for on-call staff
Vending machines in 1st floor and on each floor of bed-tower
VCS Store > you can buy anything, tax free!
Housestaff
Survival Guide
Home
Sign-out
Crosscover
Specialty
Procedures + Calcs
Phone #s
Online Kulik Card and all UIH/JBVA Phone numbers
SkyDrive > UIH Phone numbers
SkyDrive > JBVA Phone numbers
UIH Paging system
Electrolytes
Call Survival Tips
Phone Numbers
Phone #s
Housestaff
Survival Guide
Housestaff
Survival Guide
Home
Sign-out
Crosscover
Specialty
Procedures + Calcs
Electrolytes
Call Survival Tips
Phone Numbers
Phone #s
Housestaff
Survival Guide
Sign out
Sign-Out
This is probably the most important part of your call: transferring information to-and-from the different physicians and
shifts. Take pride in your sign-out and help your fellow interns by keeping it accurate and up-to-date. Remember that
there is a digital copy of signout online. This is a very helpful tool for finding patients, as you can open the document and
press 'Ctrl+F' to quickly find patients when a nurse calls you. This means less shuffling of papers. When logged in, go to
Team Sites > Internal Medicine Residents to find all the sign-out documents. We are working on a Cerner based sign-out,
and will hopefully be able to implement that soon.
Always include anticipated treatments and goals. Also, remember to mention key things that would affect management
overnight, such as:
- Neutropenia
- Cardiac function
- Anemia/Goals
Documentation of Cross-Cover Calls
A concise, focused note is very helpful for patient care and important to understand the patients hospital course. A
crosscover note should be written for every major event or decision. Consider including the following when writing a
cross-cover note:
Who you are: e.g. Resident on-call note
Who called you, what time, and reason
Brief statement about patient (age, PMH, reason for admission, # of days in-house)
Focused history regarding this issue
PEx focusing on the complaint and relevant systems
Relevant labs and tests
A/P, including differential, if warranted
If a patient is transferred to MICU, include the events leading to the transfer in addition to a complete Transfer Note
(basically a complete H&P including a detailed Hospital Course).
Credits
Housestaff
Survival Guide