They use the light from the windows to read films.
There are usually three attendings on rounds.
Nurses keep track of weight, temperature, heart rate and respiratory rate on flow sheet. They also have daily logs for each patient’s fluid plan, if they need ins and outs recorded, and what tests are pending.
Lots of oxygen is used but pulse ox (oxygen level in the blood) readings are rarely tacken or recorded. There is no continuous pulse ox monitoring even in the ICU bed. I've never even heard of an ICU patient in the US without continuous pulse ox monitoring. The ICU beds do have continuous heart rate and respiratory monitoring.
The most common treatment for UTIs is ceftriaxone. When they want better gram negative coverage they add amikacin. I only saw VCUGs scheduled for patiets with prolonged urosepsis. I did not see VCUGs scheduled for repeated UTIs, UTIs for patients under 2, or for boys with UTIs as the recommendations suggest in the US. (VCUG is a test to look for structural problems as the cause of urinary tract infections in kids.)
For pneumonia there is not a standard first line treatment. I saw amoxicillin, azihromycin, and amikacin used most often. Gentamicin and ceftriaxon were used rarely. Kids were hospitalized for 7-10 days for pneumonia treatment.
Paracetamol was used preferentially for fever. When fevers spiked repeat blood cultures were not drawn even if it was more than 48 hours since the last cultures. This was patients didn't want to pay for this or doctors assumed patients wouldn't want to pay for this.
There are no pediatric specialists for organ systems such as pulmonology, gastroenterology, or cardiology. The adult specialists consult for pediatric cases too. Consults do not write full notes with their exam findings, only their diagnosis and recommended treatment plan. This makes understanding their thinking very difficult and caused some confusion.
Interns write their exam and subjective part in the morning. Attending dictate their treatment plans during rounds. There is no assessment. The list of diagnosis includes both confirmed and possible diagnosis (usually with d/c proceeding it but always.)
Attendings make all changes to oxygen levels and also swith out oxygen tanks when needed. These are giant 4.5 feet tanks. There is no wall access. Other people seem afraid to touch the oxygen.
There are signs everywhere asking people not to charge their cell phones. The hospital does not want to pay for the electricity usage.
There is a poster from a child's point of view sayig they wish they were a t.v. so their parents would love them and pay attention to them.
The resident has an on call room and the end of the unit next to the TB isolation room. The TB isolation room has 10 feet of open air space that communicates with the rest of the unit. Not ideal for preventing transmission of an air-borne disease.
In the campos (country) closed houses with indoor ovens are a common exacerbating factor for asthma. Asthma is more common in cities though because of car pollution.
People are very upset that now there is one obese child in every classroom (about one in twenty). They say in the past there were never obese children. People blame different things but the list includes video games, t.v., pop, bad parental example, and not walking as much.
Salumedrol is the first line beta agonists used for asthma. Albuterol (used all over the place in the US) does not exist here.
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