selection of oxygen delivery devices is made by?
-made on the level of oxygen support the patient needs, severity of hypoxia, disease process
oxygen therapy is inexpensive or expensive?
inexpensive! widely available & used in a variety of settings
high flow oxygen delivery devices?
low flow oxygen delivery devices?
-nasal cannula, face mask, nonrebreather, partial rebreather masks
you can estimate the Fi02 by?
the flow rate
nasal cannula? (flow rate, summary)
simple, effective, comfortable
when is a oxygen conserving cannula used?
for patients who require higher O2 concentrations than what can be provided via regular cannula
simple oxygen mask?
short term, fits loose and delivers 35-50-60%
assessment before applying a nasal cannula or oxygen mask?
curved tips of cannula should point which way into nares?
curved tips should point downward inside
partial or nonrebreather mask should fit?
tightly around mouth, reservoir fills on exhalation and almost collapses in inspiration
how often do you check cannula/masks?
every 8 hours- make sure to put signs up at entrance of room
patient teaching of cannulas/masks?
teach about the signs of carbon dioxide retention (confusion, headache, decreased LOC, somnolence, C02 narcosis, resp arrest)
pediatrics and cannulas?
gerontological considerations with cannulas?
-fragile mucous membrane, water-based gels are useful
what are incentive spirometers for?
- provide visual feedback as encouragement! long, slow deep breathes
two types of incentive spirometers?
assessment for using a incentive spirometer?
evaluation of incentive spirometer use?
patient teaching for incentive spirometer?
-teach patient to examine sputum for consistency, amount and colour changes, should be clearer over time and decrease in volume
what is a oropharyngeal airway?
oral airways allow you to?
suction through a central core or along the side of the airway and maintain airway patency iin an unconscious patient
assessment for oral airways?
never insert an oral airway in:
a conscious patient or patient with recent oral trauma, oral surgery, or loose teeth.
-never force an airway into place!