Code Blue
4:48
Added: 3 years ago
From: MasterTrainInc
Views: 57,524
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  • hard compressions to deep

  • short version of Pals:

    ABC's: airway size = age+16/4 or size of pinky , how deep? 3xsize of tube

    ASYSTOLE AND PEA: just give meds q 3min. epi dose= 0.01mg/kg IV/IO (if no IV access put in ETT 0.1mg/kg), dosage of adh/vasopressin=0.8 Units/kg

    VF/VTACH: give meds q 3 min, shock q 1 minute

    first shock(unsyncr defibrillation)=2 J/kg, after that 4 J/kg CONSIDER:

    Narcan=0.1 mg/kg (10 kg=1 mg) amio IV/IO = 5 mg/kg IV/IO

    Lidocaine IV/IO= 1 mg/kg

    D50 = 2 cc/kg (10 kg=20 cc)

  • I'm right here next to the guy in the thingy that had cardiac arrest. Check his youtube OstrichCory and look at his face at 0:28 and look at him in his vids the only diffrence is the age. He was 7 in this now hes 13!

  • This is an AHA video so I assume it's done 100% correctly, but I thought you were not supposed to do a pulse check even after a change in rhythm, unless there was signs of life? It's been awhile a few years since my last ACLS recert...

  • .3 mg iv to 1:1000 solution

  • this reminds me of the medical series "new heart" (korean series about 2 interns)

  • I really wanna try being shocked by a defib machine, cpred on and ambu bagged me...

    ^_^

  • @JustyneVampire No you don't, it hurts like a bitch...

  • @PhoenixOrion602x How do you know?

  • @JustyneVampire Common sense. It's a massive shock of electricity. You think being electrocuted is going to feel like a pinprick? Defib units aren't meant to be used on conscious people, unless absolutely necessary. Trust me, it hurts, I've seen people shocked before that were wide awake, looks pretty painful.

  • I think you are confusing when you select adult hands free pads, which is greater than 25kg. The pt is 7 years old and the 2005 AHA guidelines classify a child between 1 and puberty.

  • A pediatric cardiopulmonary arrest is a code white in my hospital

  • This is the PALS Team MegaCode Concept video. Isn't this Registered / Copyrighted material from the American Heart Association??

  • Yes, it's copyrighted and no Training Center should be posting it on the Internet. We run an International T.C. and we are very aware of this kind of things...

    Greetings

  • the trauma team could especially the women nurses could ambu bag me and i could becpred on byt he women nurses too. resuscitation is loved by me and when a omen nurse cprs me and is trying to revive me

  • This is from the Pediatric Advanced Life Support Training Video. Not Advanced Cardiac Life Support

  • this is a good video but this is more on the PALS side ver ACLS in more adult. Peds have always been my hardess in calculation of meds in an emergency but I learned a betta system lol.

  • great vid!!

  • some med student.. its called ACLS Advanced Cardiac Life Support

  • Could you PLEASE do some more simulation videos? Could you do some pulse oximetry videos?

  • im trained by acls.. they wer great!

  • Good video by the way but it still seems rather dramatic. I know it's a dramatization but it doesn't seem to reflect typical ER interactions.

  • I think what the American Heart Association is trying to do is improve communication.

  • Excactly... This is what AHA's courses are all about.

    AHA's courses do not intend to teach us emergency medicine; they only want to teach a working SYSTEM. The systematic approach to a coded patient makes it easier, more productive and less stressful to work with. Effective and close circuit communication along with assigning tasks is the best way to work a code, forgetting about all the chaos, shouting and stress that we generally see at the ED.

  • I agree. You know most healthcare professionals in the United States don't recieve this type of intense training. At Master Train, we make them practice 28 codes in 20 hours of training.

  • you think this seems dramatic? this is one of the calmest codes ive ever seen im part of an internship at a hospital and ive seen codes and they are so much more stressful and hectic than this!

  • I have no prior training in the medical field but... Why did it take them so long to push the Epi through?

  • You have to get the blood pumping through the body with CPR before you can give drugs.

  • can someone post the aha videos? It would be so helpful for school.. I can't find them anywhere.

  • I love your video! I can't say that I'm anywhere near as polite to my staff during a code, and I don't explain every order I give, but if the purpose of this video is to educate, than a fabulous job you've done.

  • Thank you!

  • it's so sad to know that this happens

  • This is brilliant and would love to know how to acquire these for training. I am part of the resus committee in my area of work and this would be brilliant as a training aid. Great work, please message me via the site as I'd love to know more thank you. :)

  • Thank you. This video, along with many others, is available through the American Heart Association. This particular clip comes from the Pediatric Advanced Life Support (PALS) Instructor DVD. I tried to load this at a higher resolution but I'm not smart enough yet on how to do this!

  • I am a medical student and I just completed this course...its called Advanced Life Support and you have to take Basic Life Support before that course. I think all healthcare fields are at least recommended to take it.

  • Would you share this video with your friends?

  • Typically kids don't do so well when they suffer cardiac arrest. If they arrest in the field, only ablut 11% survive. In the hospital setting about 27% survive.

  • You guys have THE BEST videos I have seen SO FAR.

    So, did he live?

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