Outpatient Surgery Magazine

Ambulatory Anesthesia Supplement - July 2013

Outpatient Surgery Magazine, providing current information on Surgical Services, Surgical Facility Administration, Outpatient Surgery News and Trends, OR Excellence and more.

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Ambulatory_Anesthesia_2013_Layout 1 6/26/13 2:20 PM Page 15 I V S T A R T S SETTING THE TONE Why First-Stick Success Matters T he ini- HELPING HAND Many patients are understandably anxious before their surgeries. Successful IV starts can put them at ease. tial pro- cedure per- formed on surgical patients Jason Meehan is the IV insertion. If it goes smoothly, patients gain confidence in the abilities of your surgical external or internal jugular veins. Consider, team. If it requires multiple attempts or is too, that needle-phobic patients may not let painful, patients' anxieties may increase, you try a second time if the initial attempt which creates negative first impressions of fails. The only alternatives may be a mask the care you provide. induction of general anesthesia without an For patients who have only 1 visible vein, IV — which carries more risk than an IV it's very important that the initial IV attempt induction of general anesthesia — or can- is successful. If it fails, you have to consid- celling the case altogether. er more challenging locations, such as — Richard Novak, MD ing a regional venoconstrictor. The catheter will suffice. If there's risk of physiology behind the mechanism blood loss, or a possibility of blood isn't important. The bottom line: This transfusion, an 18-gauge catheter is technique works. appropriate. Butterfly needles are not preferred because they require leaving 4 Select the catheter a needle in the small vein, rather than Choose a standard 20-gauge or the plastic IV catheter. 22-gauge IV catheter. For most outpatient surgeries, a 20-gauge J U LY 2013 | S U P P L E M E N T TO O U T PAT I E N T S U R G E R Y M A G A Z I N E 1 5

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