This podcast was the last episode I published on From the Head of the Bed and originally came out on July 4, 2020. This is a great podcast to help SRNAs and other anesthesia learners to get their clinical flow down!
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You’ll hear Ashley walk you through everything from how to do a quick machine set up, where to put your tape, how to introduce yourself to patients & work through a preop assessment and how to proceed from getting in the door of the OR through getting the tube where you want it to go after induction. In this episode, Ashley and I talk through how to set up an operating room anesthesia workstation, perform a preoperative patient assessment and progress through an IV induction and intubation. Morgan and Mikhail’s clinical anesthesiology. Dr Scheil, DNP, CRNA practices at IU Health Arnett Hospital as of September 2021.Īmount of oxygen in cylinder in liters divided by liters of flow:Īt full pressure (1900 PSI): 660 liters / 3 lpm = 220 minutes of O2.Īt half pressure (950 PSI): 330 liters / 10 lpm = 33 minutes of O2.īutterworth, J. She worked as a critical care Registered Nurse in the surgical ICU at the Roudebush VA Medical Center in Indianapolis for 6 years before going back to anesthesia school to earn her DNP at Marian University in May of 2020. If you’re a seasoned provider and clinical educator/preceptor, this show provides a wonderful reminder of core information on the machine so you can best support your learners.Īshley Scheil earned her BSN from Purdue University in 2012.
In this episode, which was originally released in April of 2019 on From the Head of the Bed… a podcast for the anesthesia community, Ashley provides an incredibly detailed run down of the anesthesia machine: the flow of gas through the machine, high, intermediate and low pressure system components in the machine, variable bypass vaporizer structure & function, relevant gas laws, safety systems & features and more! If you’re an anesthesia learner just hitting the ORs, this show will give you a detailed run down on what you need to know to use the anesthesia machine.