Case Study: Sepsis at the Seaside A 26-year-old female arrives with a companion to an urgent care at 0845 by personal ve

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Case Study: Sepsis at the Seaside A 26-year-old female arrives with a companion to an urgent care at 0845 by personal ve

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Case Study Sepsis At The Seaside A 26 Year Old Female Arrives With A Companion To An Urgent Care At 0845 By Personal Ve 1
Case Study Sepsis At The Seaside A 26 Year Old Female Arrives With A Companion To An Urgent Care At 0845 By Personal Ve 1 (103.2 KiB) Viewed 113 times
Case Study Sepsis At The Seaside A 26 Year Old Female Arrives With A Companion To An Urgent Care At 0845 By Personal Ve 2
Case Study Sepsis At The Seaside A 26 Year Old Female Arrives With A Companion To An Urgent Care At 0845 By Personal Ve 2 (80.68 KiB) Viewed 113 times
Case Study: Sepsis at the Seaside A 26-year-old female arrives with a companion to an urgent care at 0845 by personal vehicle for treatment of suspected foot infection. The patient's companion (a female roommate) reports to the triage nurse that the patient cut her foot while wading in the ocean over the weekend. They did not initially notice the cut but discovered it while removing tar from the bottom of the right foot. Approximately 24 hours later, her foot became too painful for ambulation, and a "thick, yellowish" discharge began to drain from the cut. Vitals upon arrival at urgent care showed a temperature of 101.5F, heart rate of 130, respiratory rate of 24, and blood pressure of 86/40. Her pain was 9/10 in her right foot and described as throbbing. During a HTT assessment by the PA, the patient is reported to be arousable to voice, oriented to person and place only, and complaining of nausea. The patient reports she took Tylenol that morning to relieve pain and fever. Her skin is pale, diaphoretic, and hot. The urgent care calls 911, and medics are dispatched to the center for transfer to the local hospital to treat the patient for suspected sepsis. Knowledge break: 1. What would the urgent care nurses SBAR look like to the ED nurse? S B A R Upon arrival, medics find the patient is still tachycardic, and that her blood pressure has dropped to 80/40. Her respiratory rate has increased to 30. During transport, medics insert a 20 gauge peripheral IVs in the patient's left antecubital . They infuse a fluid bolus of 500 mL of normal saline to manage her patient's hypotension, and administer oxygen by simple mask at 4L/min. During the primary assessment, the patient's right foot reveals a two-inch laceration with no active bleeding that is erythematous, edematous (non-pitting), and radiating heat. Edema is covering the entire bottom of the right foot and extends to the patient's ankle. The patient arrives to the emergency room within 15 minutes and is admitted for treatment at 1000. On the unit, Code Sepsis is called, and the agency's sepsis protocol based on the Surviving Sepsis campaign is implemented. The patient's vitals are now a temperature of 102F, heart rate of 140, respiratory rate of 34, and blood pressure of 96/42. Lactate levels are immediately measured. A second 20 gauge peripheral IV is inserted into the right antecubital, blood cultures are drawn, and a swab sample is taken of the cut and submitted to the laboratory for a culture and sensitivity test. Broad spectrum antibiotic ceftriaxone (Rocephin) is administered, and patient is given Ibuprofen to manage her fever. The patient is diagnosed with septic shock, and because she is still hypotensive, 30mL/kg of normal saline is infused. The patient's lactate levels come back as 2.4 mmol/L. Norepinephrine (Lexerbed) is also hung, and the patient is further monitored. With careful titration and vital monitoring, the use of vasopressors restores the patient's blood pressure to 101/52. Although fluid resuscitation helps to bring the patient's heart rate down to 104, Nicardipine (Cardene) was ordered in anticipation of further needs to manage tachycardia. The patient is transferred to the ICU at 1300 for further monitoring and management of her hemodynamic status.
In the ICU, the patient's vitals stabilize. Her tachypneic state reduces, and respiratory rate is now 18. She no longer requires oxygen supplementation. Her pain is being managed with IV morphine and she rates the pain in her as 3/10. Her IV pump is running 125 mL an hour of normal saline along with piggybacked ceftriaxone (Rocephin), and labs return a lactate level of 1.5 mmol/L. The patient's roommate arrives. She is tearful and explains to the ICU nurse that she wanted to tell the patient's parents what happened, but the patient refused. The ICU nurse calls for the case manager and a social service consult to inquire further. The patient's roommate explains to the interdisciplinary team that the patient does not have insurance because she is 26 and has been removed from her parents' medical plan. The parents are also currently engaged in a divorce, do not speak to each other, and use their daughter to communicate. The patient is aware of their financial situation and her lack of medical coverage and does not want to worry her parents in spite of her critical medical state. Questions: 1. Which of her vital signs are most concerning for sepsis and what interventions need to be initiated to improve said vital signs? 2. Why did they pick Rocephin as the antibiotic of choice for this infection? 3. What nonpharmacologic pain management techniques could/should be used for her foot pain 4. Which resources need to be given or need to be provided while inpatient and once discharged? 5. Please provide 3 nursing diagnosis with 3 nursing interventions each.
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