Respiratory Therapist - ADVANCE for Nurses
Transcription
Respiratory Therapist - ADVANCE for Nurses
RC011909_ID_cover.indd 1 1/12/09 12:33:12 PM ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ SHOW US YOU'RE A ST R! ENTER THE 7 th ANNUAL NATIONAL SLEEP ACHIEVEMENT AWARDS WIN CASH PRIZES! BEST SLEEP FACILITY BEST SLEEP MANAGER BEST SLEEP TECH $1,000 CASH $500 CASH $500 CASH Winners also receive a keepsake plaque to commemorate their achievements! Plus, ADVANCEforSleep.com, ADVANCE for Managers of Respiratory Care, and ADVANCE for Respiratory Care Practitioners will feature the winners in special sections online and in print issues. If your nominee wins, you’ll receive a $25 gift certificate to the ADVANCE Healthcare Shop. advance Brought to you by: forSleep.com ENTRY DEADLINE: MARCH 19, 2009 HOW TO ENTER: Explain how your sleep tech, manager, or facility excels by answering these 10 questions: 1. Give examples of your nominee’s efforts to develop innovative programs. 2. Supply examples of how your nominee supports team members and uses the team concept to accomplish goals. 3. Describe the novel approaches your nominee takes to improve productivity and patient outcomes. 4. List awards and recognition received by your nominee, including commendations from patients. 5. How does your nominee cope with the challenges of today’s health care environment? 6. In what ways does your nominee implement “gold standards” of care and new technology, listing the equipment that your staff finds most valuable? 7. How does your nominee pursue continuing education and certification, learn new technology, and share knowledge? For the Best Facility category, what percentage of the number of sleep techs on your staff are RPSGTs? 8. How does your nominee improve the recruitment and retention of staff? 9. Explain how your nominee goes “above and beyond” to reach out The following sponsors wish you luck: to the community and how the staff promotes the sleep profession. 10. List any other reasons that support why your nominee deserves to be recognized. DETAILS: Winners will be chosen by a team of independent judges who are knowledgeable about the unique demands of this highly specialized field. Nominees will be judged solely on how well they meet these criteria—not on the writing ability of the person who submits the entry. Top submissions typically include at least a few paragraphs for each question with multiple examples to illustrate each point. Winners will be announced in June 2009. ENTRY FORM: All parts must be completed and returned on time with your answers in order to be eligible for the competition. NOMINATION CATEGORY: (Check One) ___ Best Sleep Facility ___ Best Sleep Manager ✃ ___ Best Sleep Tech YOUR NOMINEE: Name & Credentials: _______________________________________________________ Title: __________________________________________________________________ Facility: ________________________________________________________________ Facility Address: (Street) ____________________________________________________ (City) ________________________________ (State) ______ (ZIP Code) ______________ Work Phone Number: ______________________________________________________ E-mail Address: ___________________________________________________________ THREE WAYS TO ENTER: 1. Click on the National Sleep Achievement Awards icon at www.advanceweb.com/respmanager, www.advanceweb.com/rcp, or www.advanceweb.com/sleep to submit your nomination online. 2. Mail your completed entry to: Mike Bederka, Managing Editor, National Sleep Achievement Awards, 2900 Horizon Drive, King of Prussia, PA 19406. 3. Fax your nomination to 610-275-8562, Attention: Mike Bederka. QUESTIONS? Contact Mike Bederka at 610-278-1400, ext. 1128, or [email protected]. NOMINATION SUBMITTED BY: Name & Credentials: ______________________________________________________ Title: ____________________________________________________________________ Facility: __________________________________________________________________ Facility Address: (Street) _____________________________________________________ (City) ________________________________ (State) ______ (ZIP Code) ______________ Work Phone Number: _______________________________________________________ E-mail Address: ___________________________________________________________ Number of People at Your Facility: ____________ VOL. 22 | NO. 2 | JANUARY 19, 2009 contents ADVANCE FOR RESPIRATORY CARE PRACTITIONERS® COVER STORY 14 Working the Bugs Out No fewer than 147 clinical trials are now under way to evaluate the management of sepsis. However, a Holy Grail cure still eludes clinicians. (Cover by Jay Wiley/ ADVANCE thanks Amy Callahan, CRNP, Monvasi Pachinburavan, MD, Michael Baram, MD, and Thomas Jefferson University Hospital, Philadelphia) advance for Respiratory Care Practitioners® is published by Merion Publications, Inc. Publishers of leading healthcare magazines since 1985 PUBLISHER Ann Wiest Kielinski GENERAL MANAGER W.M. “Woody” Kielinski EDITORIAL Editor-Vern Enge Managing Editor-Mike Bederka Senior Associate Editor-Michael Gibbons Associate Editor & Web Editor-Shawn Proctor Medical Consultant-George G. Burton, MD Field Correspondents-Margaret Clark, RRT; Michael Donnellan, MBA, RRT-NPS; Mark Willis, MJ, RRT Columnists-A.L. DeWitt, JD, BS, RRT; Michael Hahn, RRT; Larry McGrath, RRT, RPFT; Bonnie Robertson, CRT, RPSGT; Vernon Pertelle, MBA, RRT ART & PRODUCTION Vice President, Director of Creative Services-Susan Basile Design Director-Walt Saylor Multimedia Director-Todd Gerber Art Department Manager-Lisa Pinder Associate Art Director-Scott Frymoyer Senior Graphic Artist-Jason Steigleman Illustration Manager-Chris Wofford Medical Illustrator-Jennifer Schoerke Web Manager-Jennifer Montone Recruitment Ad Design Manager-Laura Ley Recruitment & Web Ad QC Manager-Eleanor Kuchma Calendar Ad Design Manager-Cheryl Drotar Macintosh Technology Manager-Michael Galban Production Administration Manager-Tina DiVitantonio ADVERTISING Director of Marketing Services-Christina Allmer Design and Production Manager-Carla Frehn DEPARTMENTS/COLUMNS FEATURES 4 5 7 8 10 17 18 21 22 12 20 30 30 Letters to the Editor ADVANCE Job Fair Guide Sleep Speaking My Mind Legally Speaking Best in Sleep Entry Form Education Opportunities Manufacturer Spotlight Classified Employment Opportunities Barely Breathing Advertiser Index ADVANCE for Respiratory Care Practitioners® (ISSN 1074-2301) is published bi-weekly on alternate Mondays by Merion Publications, Inc., 2900 Horizon Drive, Box 61556, King of Prussia, PA 19406-0956. Periodicals Postage Paid at Norristown, PA and at additional mailing offices. ADVANCE was established April 1988, as the first bi-weekly newsmagazine exclusively for the growing respiratory care profession. ADVANCE for Respiratory ® Care Practitioners serves professionals in the field of respiratory care. POSTMASTER: send address changes to: ADVANCE for Respiratory Care Practitioners®, Merion Publications, Inc., Circulation, 2900 Horizon Drive, Box 61556, King of Prussia, PA 19406-0956. Contents are not to be reproduced or reprinted without permission of publisher. ©2009 Merion Publications, Inc.–a leader in Allied Health Care newsmagazine publishing since 1985. Improving CPAP Adherence Chronic Cough EVENTS Public Relations Director-Maria Senior Job Fair Manager-Laura Smith ADMINISTRATION Vice President, Director of Human Resources-Jaci Nicely Information & Business Systems Director-Ken Nicely Director of Marketing-Kathleen Lawler Circulation Manager-Maryann Kurkowski Billing Manager-Christine Marvel Subscriber Services Manager-Vikram Khambatta RECRUITMENT ADVERTISING Sales Director-David Gorgonzola Group Manager-Lisa Smith Senior Account Executives-Sue Borjeson, Robert Murray, Suzanne Willis Sales Associates-Chris Burkhalter, Megan Careless, Migdalia Costante, Danielle Ellis, Chip Meiers, Lydia Olsen, Adam Pitonak, Greg Poda DISPLAY ADVERTISING Sales Director-Amy Turnquist Area Sales Manager-Kevin Miller National Account Executives-Clark Celmayster, Jennifer Dierkes, Hilary Druker, Sima Sherman COMING SOON Be with ADVANCE Feb. 2 for these features: • 2009 Conference Calendar • Update on SIDS Research • Sleep Scoring in Infants. Other magazines in the ADVANCE health care family serve LPNs, RNs, imaging and radiation therapy professionals, laboratory medicine professionals, speech-language pathologists, audiologists, health information systems executives, health information professionals, rehabilitation professionals, nurse practitioners, physician assistants and post-acute care providers. Advertising Policy: All advertisements sent to Merion Publications Inc. for publication must comply with all applicable laws and regulations. Recruitment ads that discriminate against applicants based on sex, age, race, religion, marital status or any other protected class will not be accepted for publication. The appearance of advertisements in ADVANCE Newsmagazines is not an endorsement of the advertiser or its products or services. Merion Publications does not investigate the claims made by advertisers and is not responsible for their claims. ADVANCE is a member of the National Association for Health Care Recruitment. CALENDAR ADVERTISING Sales Manager-Rebecca McCafferty Account Executive-Brock Bamber Sales Associate-Lily Fayzibayeva JOB FAIRS Sales Manager-Mike Connor Account Executive-Kristin Ryan Sales Associates-Caitlin McConnell, Megan Shollenberger, Kate Yoder CUSTOM PROMOTIONS Sales Manager-Glenn Junker Senior Account Executive-Noel Lopez Sales Associates-John Rooney, Dallas Magerkurth HOW TO REACH US: Merion Publications, Inc. Advance for Respiratory Care Practitioners 2900 Horizon Drive Box 61556 King of Prussia, PA 19406-0956 (610) 278-1400 www.advanceweb.com For a FREE subscription: (800) 355-1088 Looking for a Job? Call our Job Hotline: (800) 355-6504 For information about a Product or Sneak Peek: (800) 355-6504 To order Article Reprints: (800) 355-5627, ext. 1446 To place a calendar, display or recruitment ad, or to contact the editorial department: (800) 355-5627 www.advanceweb.com/rcp ❘ January 19, 2009 ❘ ADVANCE for Respiratory Care Practitioners 3 LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Aimee Staggenborg, MA, RRT, mentioned a few common items that can serve as avenues for transport of methicillinresistant Staphylococcus aureus but left out one important vector: the computer keyboard (“A Nasty Bug,” Dec. 8 issue). The electronic medical record is ubiquitous, but we fail to consider the keyboard or PDA as a source of MRSA, despite the fact that we tap on our keyboards hundreds of times each day. In the pulmonary function lab at Nemours Children’s Clinic in Orlando, we use a silicon-based flexible “indestructible keyboard.” This flat keyboard is completely washable with no place for MRSA to hide between the keys. These keyboards are durable and inexpensive and can be cleaned with disposable wipes over and over again with no harm to the keys. CLEARING THE RECORD The photo that accompanied “Tempting But Unproven” (Jan. 5 issue) did not accurately depict noninvasive ventilation. Some experts even have recommended the keyboards in health care facilities be disinfected after each use. I would suggest other labs consider a flat keyboard as part of their infection control prevention protocol. —Bruce Brown, MS, RRT, AE-C Pulmonary Function Laboratory Nemours Children’s Clinic Orlando, Fla. New Name Suggested For Therapists I have coined a term that I am hoping will catch on. I contend that we, as respiratory therapists who are familiar with mechanical ventilation, are “artificial life support specialists.” The title conveys our specialized expertise and knowledge and the critical lifemaintaining role that we play. This strong job title would increase our respectability among society and other medical personnel who notoriously undervalue us. People often say “wow” and get wideeyed when I say artificial life support specialist versus RT. The latter job title doesn’t usually conjure up much or convey truthfully what we really do. —J. Ethan McDermith, BSRC San Antonio EXCLUSIVE WEB FEATURES Room to Grow Transitioning CF patients from adolescence to adulthood. Test your smarts with our crossword puzzle designed specifically for respiratory therapists. 4 ADVANCE for Respiratory Care Practitioners ❘ January 19, 2009 ❘ www.advanceweb.com/rcp JAMES D. NORTHEY PHOTOGRAPHY Motivation Questionnaire Do You Know About Flu and Colds? Then, write a letter to the editor to ADVANCE for Respiratory Care Practitioners. We accept comments on articles that appeared in print or online, as well as general health care topics. All letters should be no more than 300 words in length and should include the writer’s name, credentials, city and state. Letters are subject to editing for clarity, length, content, grammar and punctuation. Send comments to Mike Bederka, managing editor, at mbederka@advance web.com. We look forward to hearing from you! Cryptogram By Dave Kissin, BS, RRT Clue: S = I NFP LXNSBSRSLO LSXCLI CSNF NFP MOZCSAM PAW SE LA P.N. NGYP. OFF THE CUFF ONLINE www.advanceweb.com/rcp Blogger Cheryl Ellis offers a short survey to determine whether your career needs resuscitation. HAVE SOMETHING TO SAY? Answer: The artificial airway with the glowing end is an E.T. tube. 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WITH OUR COUPON IN THE PROGRAM GUIDE DISTRIBUTED AT THE JOB FAIR Shop the ADVANCE Healthcare Shop booth at the Job Fair for huge savings on hundreds of items, including scrubs, professional products, and more. www.advanceweb.com/shop PASADENA, CA • 4/28/2009 Pasadena Convention Center ADVANCE Healthcare Shop: For Gear, Gadgets & Gifts City of Hope Huntington Hospital Los Angeles County Department of Health Services, Office of Nursing Affairs Mariner Healthcare ADVANCE Healthcare Shop: For Gear, Gadgets & Gifts Amedisys KING OF PRUSSIA, PA • 4/14/2009 Valley Forge Convention Center Interview candidates face-to-face at ADVANCE Job Fairs! Call 800-546-4987 today to be an exhibitor at an upcoming event. Give them something to remember you by. Get customized items for your table at ADVANCE Custom Promotions: www.advancecustompromotions.com. ADVANCE Healthcare Shop: For Gear, Gadgets & Gifts Amedisys HealthBridge Management MIAMI BEACH, FL • 3/24/2009 Miami Beach Convention Center ADVANCE Healthcare Shop: For Gear, Gadgets & Gifts Mariner Healthcare CALLING ALL RECRUITERS! WOBURN, MA • 4/16/2009 Hilton Boston/Woburn The ADVANCE Healthcare Shop accepts cash, checks, and all major credit cards. This coupon can only be used once and must be redeemed at the ADVANCE Job Fair. This offer cannot be combined with any other ADVANCE Healthcare Shop offers and is not valid on clearance merchandise. ADVANCE Healthcare Shop: For Gear, Gadgets & Gifts Amedisys Tender Touch Health Care Services ARLINGTON, VA • 5/11/2009 Marriott’s Crystal Gateway Hotel ADVANCE Healthcare Shop: For Gear, Gadgets & Gifts The College Network By Bonnie Robertson, AAHM, CRT, RPSGT SLEEP Sleep Can Help Us Achieve Our Resolutions minor accidents and depression,“ researchers concluded.2 3. Exercise improves sleep in patients with insomnia. Also, good sleep habits contribute to better athletic performance, and routine exercise leads to better results when accompanied by adequate quantity and quality of sleep, according to a recent study.3 4. Alcohol may help initiate sleep, but it certainly causes disruptive sleep during the sleep cycle.4 As the alcohol metabolizes, sleep lightens and multiple awakenings occur. People with sleep problems should reduce the number of alcoholic beverages they drink. 5. The successful adherence to the above resolutions will result in better sleep. But the most important element gained from good sleep habits is good health itself. Our immune system is strongest during sleep.5 Loss of sleep and poor quality sleep result in a reduction of our body’s ability to fight infection. ■ AS 2009 STEAMS ahead, many of us have made resolutions to improve our physical and emotional health in the new year. Did any of you make it a goal to sleep more or to sleep better? Probably not. People still take sleep for granted. Sleep should be at the top of your new year’s list. But as always, the popular resolutions remain the same: eat better, lose weight, quit smoking, exercise more and drink less. These resolutions are commendable, and improving your sleep behaviors can help you accomplish them as well. Five Links to Sleep 1. Research shows a correlation between sleep and our metabolic function. An adequate sleep pattern is fundamental for the nutritional balance of the body, and individuals who sleep less have a higher probability of becoming obese.1 2. Nicotine addiction negatively impacts sleep. “Cigarette smokers were significantly more likely than nonsmokers to report problems going to sleep, problems staying asleep, daytime sleepiness, Bonnie Robertson is the president of Robertson Sleep Medicine Consulting LLC in Indianapolis. For references, visit www.advanceweb.com/rcp and click on the “magazine” tab. ADVANCE is on FACEBOOK and we want you to join us! Jason Kim CHECK OUT OUR FACEBOOK PAGE TODAY. Visit www.advanceweb.com/rcp and click on the “Find Us on Facebook” link. It’s a fun and easy way to stay connected with your profession. Mike Jody Heather The ADVANCE for Respiratory Care Practitioners Facebook page gives you the chance to: U Meet tons of new people in your field U Share your experiences s on our wall U Post your photos and videos ideos U Read our staff blogs U And much more TDON’T HAVE A FACEBOOK ACCOUNT? It only takes a few simple clicks to get one. You’ll find a link at the top of our page to sign up for free. www.advanceweb.com/rcp ❘ January 19, 2009 ❘ ADVANCE for Respiratory Care Practitioners 7 SPEAKING MY MIND By Vern Enge It’s Time to Apply Logic To Our Belief Systems WE ALL chuckle at wall plaques bearing legends like, “More than 90 percent of drivers believe they are above average in ability.” However, logic should dictate only 50 percent can achieve the higher category. And judging from the drivers I encounter, I would say more than 90 percent possess a driving ability far, far below any standard of mediocrity. In a similar vein, it has been years since I met anyone who didn’t profess to be above average in intelligence. If you were to judge your department, you would probably find only one person who might even remotely fit into the intelligencechallenged category. We all know that individual. Let’s face some facts. We all have biases and we’re always right; the opposition, 100 percent wrong. We know, for example, those with Viking blood in their veins are far superior to Johnny-come-lately Spaniards who claim to have discovered America. Sorry. They were about 500 years too late. In broad terms, nearly everyone can spot logic fallacies. Unfortunately, most people forget to apply logic when their own beliefs are concerned, especially when engaged in disagreements about politics and religion. We were bombarded intellectually during the presidential election. Conservatives blamed the nation’s woes on left-wing media liberals, and far-left groups blasted right-wing types as stodgy, uninformed, unenlightened and prejudiced. We can argue religion and politics until we’re blue in the face, but we must remember we’re dealing with issues of faith, not fact. We can summon all types of scientific studies, philosophical tracts and anecdotal evidence to support our views, but the bottom line still remains we’re building our governing principles on plain and simple biases. It would be helpful if we could readily discern between beliefs and facts. Sadly, I don’t believe this is possible. Instead, we plow ahead in our belief we’re above average thinkers and superior drivers. In health care, we conclude our leaders are involved in objective science. In reality, their findings are as likely to be based on faulty logic and skewed data as not. Too many accept scientific findings as truths rather than opinions and don’t bother to question the logic behind them because the answers already fall into their realm of beliefs. On the surface, we may accept findings that black males, for example, are more likely to succumb to asthma, heart disease, liver failure and stroke than their white counterparts because they lack insurance or live in less affluent neighborhoods. Aren’t such questions based on a biased premise there are racial disparities at work? If you ask health questions based on biased assumptions, you will assemble data that will prove there are indeed racial and economic imbalances at work. We can fall into the same fallacies if we compare males to females in areas like earnings and job opportunities. Not everything is equal. It’s time we evaluate our beliefs and apply logic to situations confronting us. We all need to question everything before accepting conclusions. We’re so used to relying on generalizations that we fail to realize we have even formed them. As a result, we cling to notions like all minorities and women are part of disadvantaged social groups. In that context, consider white males are really an unrecognized minority group in the U.S. They’re vastly outnumbered by a combination of women and minorities and account for probably less than 25 percent of the entire population. As such, they can’t be blamed for everything. It’s time to watch out for flawed arguments, folks. ■ Vern Enge, editor, can be reached at venge@ advanceweb.com. 8 ADVANCE for Respiratory Care Practitioners ❘ January 19, 2009 ❘ www.advanceweb.com/rcp EDITORIAL BOARD David Kissin, BS, RRT, CPFT Staff Therapist Maine Medical Center Portland, Maine George W. Lantz, BS, RRT, CPFT, FAARC Clinical Manager of Cardiopulmonary Services and Hyperbaric Medicine Doctors Hospital Augusta, Ga. Thomas A. Madrin, BS, RRT Director of Respiratory Care Services Medical Center of Central Georgia Macon, Ga. William J. Niedert, BS, RRT, RCP Senior RCP SNF-Ventilator Care Service Harmony House Care Center Waterloo, Iowa Alphonso Quinones, MA, RRT, RPFT, CCT Director of Respiratory Therapy Asst. Director of Central Therapeutics North Shore University Hospital Brooklyn, N.Y. Tim Sharkey, BS, RRT, RPFT, RPSGT Clinical Consultant Mallinckrodt Corp. Norfolk, Va. Helen Sorenson, MA, RRT, FAARC Assistant Professor Department of Respiratory Care University of Texas Health Sciences Center at San Antonio John M. Weis, NHA, RRT Health System Consultant Siemens Medical Systems Malvern, Pa. Kathy Yandle, BA, RRT, CPFT Hospital Services Coordinator Gift of Life Donor Program Philadelphia ® SERVO-i WITH NAVA NEURALLY ADJUSTED VENTILATORY ASSIST TRUE VENTILATION INTELLIGENCE BEGINS WITH THE BRAIN ARE CRITICAL C THE ABCs of SYNCHRONY A Neural Signal to Breathe B Edi Catheter Routes Signal C SERVO-i to Ventilator ® Ventilator Provides Requested Level of Assist SYNCHRONY WITHIN EACH AND EVERY BREATH One of the world’s most trusted and flexible ventilation platforms is now enhanced with NAVA (Neurally Adjusted Ventilatory Assist) that adapts to your patients’ changing needs. 䡲 Better patient/ventilator synchrony helps improve patient comfort, potentially reducing the need for sedation; this could lead to faster recovery and weaning times. In NAVA mode, the SERVO-i® Ventilator operates from the neural signal – the patient’s own impulse to breathe. This autonomic directive is sensed by the Edi catheter and routed to the ventilator. 䡲 True cycle-off criteria makes NAVA the only mode of ventilation that lets patients communicate to the ventilator when they have had enough – potentially reducing lung injury and achieving true synchrony. As a result, patients receive precisely the level of support they want within each and every changing breath by controlling their own flow, pressure, volume and frequency. 䡲 Diagnostic respiratory data provides decision support to help reduce the incidence of lung injury (conventional ventilation mode). For more information or to arrange a demonstration, please visit www.maquetusa.com. 䡲 Studies indicate that improved synchrony can reduce the length of stay in the ICU.* SERVO-i® with NAVA – Empowering Human Effort. 䡲 Available for all patients – neonatal to adult. * See, for example: Thille, A; Rodriguez, P; Cabello, B; Lellouche, F; Brochard, L; “Patient-ventilator asynchrony during assisted mechanical ventilation,” Intensive care med., (226), 32:1515-1522, DOI 10. 1007/s00134-006-0301-8 MAQUET, Inc. 1140 Route 22 East, Suite 202 Bridgewater, NJ 08807 1-888-MAQUET-3 www.maquetusa.com MEMBER OF THE GETINGE GROUP LEGALLY SPEAKING By A.L. DeWitt, JD, RRT, FAARC Approach Any Subpoena with Extra Care TO JOHN ROE: “You are commanded to give deposi- his correspondence with lawyers. The simple act of writing the lettion testimony in the matter of Doe v. Doe and to bring ter has the effect of stopping the subpoena. with you the following documents: The medical record In health care, it is common for attorneys to serve subpoenas for of John Doe and any letters received from your attor- health care records. Often, subpoenas of this nature will be accomneys in this case.” panied by a signed release that complies with HIPAA. If not, howSubpoenas are scary things. They direct you to ever, both HIPAA and common law place a duty on the provider to appear or to produce documents. They usually resist enforcement. come via either a process server or a law enforcement officer. If you Normally, the issue arises like the following: receive such a document, it is fair to assume you have information Mr. Smith and Mr. Jones collide at an intersection and Jones is someone else wants and that individual has asked a court to direct injured. He sues Smith claiming long-term medical injury. Smith’s you to provide it. lawyer wants to see the medical records; Jones’ lawyer refuses to In most state courts, the subpoena must be served by a sheriff. In provide them. federal court, the document can be served by anyone over age 18 Smith’s lawyer then sends a subpoena to the hospital, and that who is not a party to the action. facility’s lawyer files a “motion to At first glance, nothing in the quash.” That motion is heard in subpoena suggests a person may front of the judge assigned to the While every health care provider do anything other than comcase. has the right to resist a subpoena, ply. The document commands; it In most cases, because Jones has does not suggest your appearance. placed his medical condition at no one has the right to ignore one. But HIPAA, among other statissue, the court will issue a court utes, recognizes a subpoena is a order compelling the production of request, not a demand, and that providers have not only the right the records. to resist a subpoena but sometimes the duty when one party or Sometimes, however, lawyers attempt to get around patient conanother objects to the production. fidentiality by serving subpoenas directly on the care provider. A subpoena is usually not issued by a judge. In most courts, the Instead of requesting records, they serve a notice to take the clerk of the court is authorized to issue it and doesn’t apply a lot of deposition of the witness and plan on asking questions that might thought to it. In fact, it works pretty much like this: require the provider to reveal patient information. Lawyer: “I need a subpoena in Doe v. Doe.” In most states, however, the provider can object or ask the court Clerk: “OK.” for a protective order that places certain subjects off limits to Then the clerk hands the lawyer a subpoena form, the lawyer questions. fills it out and the clerk signs and seals it. The clerk does not look If an answer to a question would reveal patient-confidential at the subpoena to see whether the lawyer is asking for info he can information, the caregiver has both a legal and ethical duty not to lawfully get. The clerk just issues the subpoena. disclose it. In many cases, a subpoena may be issued without notifying all This is why a health care provider (even one who is not named the parties on the other side. As a practical matter, smart lawyers as a defendant) must have legal counsel if subpoenaed. If the subprovide notice to all parties; but it is never safe to assume anyone poena relates to work performed at another facility, the care proelse has been notified. vider should alert that facility and allow its legal counsel to become What is not readily apparent is a person who gets served with a involved. subpoena doesn’t necessarily have to appear or do what the subIn most states, willfully disobeying a subpoena can result in a poena commands. In Missouri, the rules regarding subpoenas contempt of court jail term. Remember, lodging an objection to state: producing records is lawful. Not showing up isn’t. So while every “A non-party … may serve … a written objection to inspection health care provider has the right to resist a subpoena, no one has and copying of any or all of the designated materials. The objection the right to ignore one. shall state specific reasons why the subpoena should be quashed If you are served with a subpoena, your first call should be to or modified. an attorney to find out whether you need to comply or resist the “If a timely and specific objection is made, the party seeking subpoena. ■ discovery shall not be entitled to inspect and copy the materials except by a court order.” A.L. DeWitt is a partner in the law firm of Bartimus, Frickleton, RobertIn the example above, Mr. Roe could simply send a letter to the son and Gorny, Jefferson City, Mo. This column is not a substitute for the lawyer who served the subpoena saying he objected to producing advice of qualified legal counsel. 10 ADVANCE for Respiratory Care Practitioners ❘ January 19, 2009 ❘ www.advanceweb.com/rcp 1377-2008 Your time ventilator is precious... What if your could give you more? Reduce overall ventilation time by 33%1 Ventilation in the ICU requires a wide range of features for your most critical patient. The EvitaXL provides state of the art technology to meet this challenge. With SmartCare ®/PS weaning is automated and can be a true time-saver in the ICU. Both you and your patient benefit from Dräger technology at the bedside. Order an EvitaXL and take advantage of our limited time offer of the Lung Protection Package (LPP) at no charge to you – a software option that helps you initiate lung protective ventilation. CALL 1-800-4DRAGER TO GET YOUR LPP2 FOR FREE WHEN ORDER ING AN EVITA XL. Dräger. Technology for Life® 1 2 Results are based on a European Multicenter Randomized Trial with 144 patients demonstrating improved respiratory condition, with stable hemodynamic and neurologic status, and no ARDS prior to initiating weaning. Reference: [14] Lelloche et al.; Am J Respir Crit Care Med Vol 174, pp 894-900, 2006 Offer expires March 31, 2009. OSA TREATMENT help patients gain insight of their own needs, some of which they don’t readily recognize because they may have lived with sleep problems for years. In the Details Consider Comfort and Compliance When Setting Up CPAP By Aimee Staggenborg, MA, RRT T reating sleep-disordered breathing is among the core duties of respiratory therapists and a primary task of sleep techs. Most often, the disorder is treated by continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP). This therapy, however, cannot follow a one-size-fits-all approach. Every patient should undergo an initial basic needs assessment to gain the best possible outcome and compliance with CPAP. Clinicians must consider numerous variables when beginning treatment, including physical comfort, logistical considerations and emotional roadblocks. Always remember each person has unique needs. Consequently, a thorough pre-interview is a crucial first step for developing a good working relationship between the patient and health care provider. During this pre-interview, the caregiver should ask questions about anything and everything that will help in the needs assessment. These interviews don’t strictly benefit clinicians. Rather, they Limiting Factors Muscle and skeletal contortion also may limit the use of some masks, and these physiological attributes may additionally cause positional leaking in the mask. If the patient is a mouth breather, that is if a dry mouth is present, then sleep experts should recommend a full face mask or use a chin strap to help alleviate leak complaints. In addition, facial hair at contact points can cause leaks at the mask interface. Pressure levels greater than 15 cm H2O also contribute to problems with seal leaks. To counteract that issue, caregivers should carefully select a mask with a rigid seal. An interface with a flexible membrane, aka a dual wall seal, will help control leaks. Clinicians should examine other comfort considerations beyond the patient’s preferred sleeping position. Individuals with poor arm mobility or limited dexterity in their fingers should be given an interface that’s simple to put on and take off. Also, the caregiver should include family members in equipment orientation sessions because they may be the caretaker in charge at home. Keep in mind the physical structure of a patient’s face may limit the use of some interfaces (for example, very small, wide, narrow or large noses). Similarly, patients with high foreheads or very long faces can be difficult to properly fit. Because most interfaces aren’t custom-made, the caregiver should select the best option for the patient, considering these limitations. 12 ADVANCE for Respiratory Care Practitioners ❘ January 19, 2009 ❘ www.advanceweb.com/rcp SHAWN PROCTOR Initial Assessments Logistical considerations include mask selection. Poorly fitted masks can lead to problems and non-compliance. Also in this category are breathing problems. Patients with recurrent sinus infections, for example, should discuss that tendency with their physicians prior to starting therapy. This is important because CPAP can lead to increased sinus pressure. Any sinus infections should be treated effectively and quickly to keep patients motivated and comfortable during treatment. Nasal/septal deviations may prevent a patient from using a nasal or direct nasal mask. This subset of individuals may need to be fitted with a full face mask. Examine sleep positions in the assessment phase as well; some positions may prevent the use of certain masks. Therapists and sleep techs need this information so they can best determine the type of mask that will work the best from purely a logistical standpoint. Patients who sleep on their back with a slightly elevated head position are the ideal candidates for benefitting from CPAP. However, this sleep position isn’t comfortable for all people, and trying to change their normal positions will doom therapy compliance almost from the start. OSA TREATMENT Tailor-made Plans From the offset of treatment, caregivers should determine the most sensible plan of action for the patient and then work to keep it simple. A person’s preference always should play a role when addressing the initial comfort fitting. By selecting the right mask the first time, the caregiver can do a lot to promote long-term compliance and confidence and ultimately help keep costs down. A thorough pre-interview is a crucial first step for developing a good working relationship between the patient and health care provider. Sensations of overwhelming pressure or oxygen flow may interfere with compliance. Caregivers need to detect and tackle this problem carefully because pressures cannot be changed without a physician’s order. On the other hand, caregivers can make some comfort adjustments on the machine to make the patient feel better. People who cannot tolerate high pressures delivered by CPAP might benefit by being switched to an auto-adjusting or bi-level device. Again, remember any change in the therapy-delivering mechanism requires a physician’s order. From the onset, caregivers must stress that patients need to commit to optimal usage if they’re to gain the maximum benefits. They also need to emphasize it’s important for the patient to communicate with all pertinent care providers if problems arise after initial set-up. It’s helpful for caregivers to think outside the box too. Those working with apprehensive patients or those having difficulty adjusting to the mask might consider using a gradual time-increase strategy. For example, have the patient practice wearing the mask for 15 minutes three times a day. This should continue for about a week; and at the end of the trial run, the patient should try wearing the mask to sleep for one or two hours. After two weeks, the goal would be for the patient to increase the use to a full night. Be flexible on this trial. The time elements initially may need to be adapted to fit each patient’s needs and limitations. Mental and emotional roadblocks, of course, present special considerations and concerns as well. Caregivers should encourage their patients to conduct their own research into specific interfaces and take responsibility for their own care. Encouragement, reassurance and pep talks may help to promote usage. Sleep may be inhibited if the patient has any anxiety, depression or other mental disorders; but don’t try to make any assessments about root causes of the anxiety or mental disorders. Your job is to treat the patients to the best of your ability and refer them again to their sleep doctors if all interventions and efforts fail. ■ Aimee Staggenborg is a Missouri practitioner and freelance writer. January 19, 2009 ❘ ADVANCE for Respiratory Care Practitioners 13 Go Digital Need a good reason to finally get your official FREE ADVANCE subscription? How about a choice of formats? ADVANCE digital edition is now available. Our digital edition is everything you love about ADVANCE in a convenient, flexible, and easily accessible format. Subscribe FREE today to get the same great articles, news, and information that you can find in our popular print edition. SUBSCRIBE FREE YOUR CHOICE OF A PRINT OR DIGITAL EDITION! www.advanceweb.com COVER STORY Working the Bugs Can Clinicians Conquer Sepsis? By Michael Gibbons 14 ADVANCE for Respiratory Care Practitioners ❘ January 19, 2009 ❘ www.advanceweb.com/rcp JAY WILEY Amy Callahan, CRNP, left, Monvasi Pachinburavan, MD, and Michael Baram, MD, discuss sepsis control protocols at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital in Philadelphia. COVER STORY N Antibiotic Selection To manage sepsis, Baram and his colleagues use various algorithms to select the correct antibiotic. “Patients in the bone marrow unit get a certain antibiotic regimen; folks with community-acquired pneumonia get another one,” he said. “We’ve standardized it.” These algorithms and a tracking system to reduce errors are the result of a multidisciplinary collaboration among pharmacy, the ID, the ED, and pulmonary and critical care. When antibiotics are ordered, patients are “pan cultured” to help identify the source of infection. Also, mini-bronchoalveolar lavages identify infection type and help to “customize antibiotic use to prevent antibiotic resistance,” Baram said. For infection accompanied by low blood pressure, Baram and his colleagues practice aggressive fluid resuscitation, source control (removing an infected catheter, draining abscesses, surgically removing infected tissue, etc.), GI prophylaxis, DVT prophylaxis (boots and/or a heparin-type agent), and the standard vent bundle that includes elevating the patient’s head 30 degrees. As a further therapy, “we assess their need for recombinant human activated protein C, a component of our coagulation cascade,” Baram said. “Those with severe ARDS and unbridled inflammation can develop micro-vascular blood clots. Activated protein C can prevent clotting so patients don’t suffer clot-induced organ damage.” Enriched Enteral Feeds Meanwhile, the National Institutes of Health-backed research initiative known as the ARDS Clinical Network (ARDSnet) has launched two major sepsis studies, Neil MacIntyre, MD, told CHEST 2008 delegates. In a cost-saving coup, both studies will occur simultaneously and test the same cohort of 1,200 mechanically ventilated patients. So long as the two investigations don’t impinge on each other, the same patients can be recruited for both, explained MacIntyre, medical director of respiratory care services, the pulmonary function lab and the pulmonary rehabilitation program at Duke University Medical Center, Durham, N.C. In one study, ARDSnet researchers will assess the value of bolstering the enteral feeds of those patients with omega-3 fatty acids versus omega-6 fatty acids. ARDSnet investigators hope to build on the results of a 2006 Brazilian study that found a mortality benefit to immuno-nutrition in patients with sepsis.1 The second study will compare the benefits of early versus late enteral feeding in mechanical ventilation. “Some clinicians believe early feeding is advantageous by reducing the risk of aspiration, but this is controversial,” MacIntyre said. Updated Guidelines Last year saw the release of the Surviving Sepsis Campaign, updated international guidelines for managing severe sepsis and septic shock.2 A panel of experts reviewed the body of evidence-based ▼ o fewer than 147 clinical trials registered on Clinicaltrials. gov are now under way to evaluate the management of sepsis, the pathogenic poisoning of blood and tissues that threatens the lives of critically ill patients. While this impressive body of literature is arming humans with many weapons to fight the bugs that infiltrate the intensive care unit, a Holy Grail cure for sepsis continues to elude clinicians. “There are still more questions than definitive answers,” Robert Balk, MD, told clinicians at CHEST 2008 in Philadelphia in Thomas Jefferson clinicians October. Follow existing guide- customize antibiotic use to lines and recommendations but individual patients. be alert for modifications based on age, gender, co-morbidities and other variables, advised Balk, director of pulmonology and critical care medicine at Rush University Medical Center, Chicago. Preventing sepsis whenever possible and minimizing its effects when it strikes are also in the financial interests of hospitals: Insurers are growing increasingly reluctant to reimburse for extended ICU stays resulting from hospital-acquired infections. At Thomas Jefferson University Hospital, Philadelphia, patients on mechanical ventilation automatically generate a sepsis-prevention order set. That includes oral hygiene with chlorhexidine to minimize oral bacteria, explained Michael Baram, MD, attending intensivist. Other automatic orders include daily sedation “holidays” to reduce the risk of over-sedation and expedite weaning. “We also have a once-a-day automatic spontaneous breathing trial for vent patients unless they are very hypoxic or paralyzed,” he said. www.advanceweb.com/rcp ❘ January 19, 2009 ❘ ADVANCE for Respiratory Care Practitioners 15 COVER STORY literature and strongly agreed on several courses of action: early goal-directed resuscitation during the first six hours after recognition, blood cultures before antibiotic therapy, prompt imaging studies to confirm potential sources of infection, and broad-spectrum antibiotic therapy within one hour of diagnosis. However, questions linger. For example, is low-dose vasopressin preferable in septic shock? In one study, researchers found lowdose vasopressin did not reduce mortality rates compared with norepinephrine among patients with septic shock treated with catecholamine vasopressors.3 And a 2007 study found no difference in efficacy and safety between epinephrine alone versus norepinephrine plus dobutamine to manage septic shock. This study did, however, find higher early lactate levels in the epinephrine patients “suggesting either increased formation of lactate or decreased clearance of lactate, or some combination of the two, in patients treated with epinephrine compared to those treated with norepinephrine,” Balk added in a follow-up interview. Another question concerns glucose. Both the American Diabetes Association and the Surviving Sepsis Campaign recommend tight glucose control in the critically ill. But a 2008 analysis concluded tight glucose control not only doesn’t reduce mortality but can increase the risk of hypoglycemia.4 “With hypoglycemia, you run the risk of brain damage,” Balk said. The war against sepsis continues, and sepsis guidelines, while impressive, “are not written in stone,” Balk concluded. ■ References 1. Pontes-Arruda A, Aragao A, Albuquerque J. Effects of enteral feeding with eicosapentaenoic acid, gamma-linolenic acid, and antioxidants in mechanically ventilated patients with severe sepsis and septic shock. Crit Care Med. (2006; 34, 9: 2325-33). 2. Dellinger P, Levy M, Carlet J, et al. Surviving Sepsis Campaign: international guidelines for management of severe sepsis and septic shock: 2008. Crit Care Med. (2008; 36, 1: 296-327). 3. Russell J, Walley K, Singer J, et al. Vasopressin versus norepinephrine infusion in patients with septic shock. N Engl J Med. (2008; 358, 9: 877-87). 4. Wiener R, Wiener D, Larson R. Benefits and risks of tight glucose control in critically ill adults: a meta-analysis. JAMA. (2008; 300, 8: 933-44). Michael Gibbons, senior associate editor, can be reached at mgibbons@ advancweb.com. Too Much of a Good Thing ICU patients face another danger besides sepsis: inadvertent injury from the very machines that help them breathe. Fragile lungs are vulnerable to ventilator-induced lung injury (VILI) from too much tidal volume during mechanical ventilation (MV), particularly the upper regions of the lungs considered by pulmonologists the “zone of overdistension,” said Neil MacIntyre, MD. Several trials are now assessing the value of several lung protective strategies in MV, he said—with mixed results. One recent study found no mortality benefit for higher positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) settings, MacIntyre noted. While higher PEEP recruits more closed alveolar units, it also, unfortunately, increases plateau pressures and “the two cancel each other out for no net benefit,” he said. High-frequency ventilation (HFV), a lung-protective mode MacIntyre characterized as “CPAP with a wiggle,” while interesting in theory, is “in desperate need of more clinical trials,” he said. Some experts think jet pulses can help clear secretions in the lungs, MacIntyre said, but to date, only one study has compared HFV to conventional MV and the results were not significant.1 However, two new studies are under way to compare jet ventilation and lung-protective conventional MV. Meanwhile, airway pressure release ventilation (APRV), a pressure-targeted mode in which the patient activates the breaths, is showing promise as a lung protective mode. 16 APRV has a longer inspiratory time and a shorter expiratory time to improve recruitment without adding more PEEP or tidal volume, MacIntyre said. APRV “is our salvage mode” when patients fail on assist control mode, said Michael Baram, MD. “(With APRV), we are able to dramatically reduce dead space and reduce minute ventilation to improve oxygenation.” Up to now, APRV has not shown it can improve patient outcomes, though the mode “is something in need of looking at more closely,” MacIntyre judged. Researchers from Johns Hopkins in Baltimore are planning to do just that. In a trial scheduled for completion by July 2010, they will determine whether APRV can reduce agitation and delirium, reduce the requirements for sedative medications and lower the risk of VILI. They plan to randomize 40 patients with acute lung injury to APRV or conventional MV for 24 hours. Then they’ll switch the patients to the opposite ventilator mode for another 24 hours. At the end of each 24-hour period, they will measure the amounts of sedatives each group of patients needed, plus measure the concentrations of cytokines and other markers of inflammation in the blood and lung. Those markers are indicators of VILI. ■ Reference 1. Stephen D, Sangeeta M, Thomas S, et al. High-frequency oscillatory ventilation for acute respiratory distress syndrome in adults: a randomized, controlled trial. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. (2002; 166, 6: 801-8). —Michael Gibbons ADVANCE for Respiratory Care Practitioners ❘ January 19, 2009 ❘ www.advanceweb.com/rcp ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ SHOW US YOU'RE A ST R! ENTER THE 7 th ANNUAL NATIONAL SLEEP ACHIEVEMENT AWARDS WIN CASH PRIZES! BEST SLEEP FACILITY BEST SLEEP MANAGER BEST SLEEP TECH $1,000 CASH $500 CASH $500 CASH Winners also receive a keepsake plaque to commemorate their achievements! Plus, ADVANCEforSleep.com, ADVANCE for Managers of Respiratory Care, and ADVANCE for Respiratory Care Practitioners will feature the winners in special sections online and in print issues. If your nominee wins, you’ll receive a $25 gift certificate to the ADVANCE Healthcare Shop. advance Brought to you by: forSleep.com ENTRY DEADLINE: MARCH 19, 2009 HOW TO ENTER: Explain how your sleep tech, manager, or facility excels by answering these 10 questions: 1. Give examples of your nominee’s efforts to develop innovative programs. 2. Supply examples of how your nominee supports team members and uses the team concept to accomplish goals. 3. Describe the novel approaches your nominee takes to improve productivity and patient outcomes. 4. List awards and recognition received by your nominee, including commendations from patients. 5. How does your nominee cope with the challenges of today’s health care environment? 6. In what ways does your nominee implement “gold standards” of care and new technology, listing the equipment that your staff finds most valuable? 7. How does your nominee pursue continuing education and certification, learn new technology, and share knowledge? For the Best Facility category, what percentage of the number of sleep techs on your staff are RPSGTs? 8. How does your nominee improve the recruitment and retention of staff? 9. Explain how your nominee goes “above and beyond” to reach out The following sponsors wish you luck: to the community and how the staff promotes the sleep profession. 10. List any other reasons that support why your nominee deserves to be recognized. DETAILS: Winners will be chosen by a team of independent judges who are knowledgeable about the unique demands of this highly specialized field. Nominees will be judged solely on how well they meet these criteria—not on the writing ability of the person who submits the entry. Top submissions typically include at least a few paragraphs for each question with multiple examples to illustrate each point. Winners will be announced in June 2009. ENTRY FORM: All parts must be completed and returned on time with your answers in order to be eligible for the competition. NOMINATION CATEGORY: (Check One) ___ Best Sleep Facility ___ Best Sleep Manager ✃ ___ Best Sleep Tech YOUR NOMINEE: Name & Credentials: _______________________________________________________ Title: __________________________________________________________________ Facility: ________________________________________________________________ Facility Address: (Street) ____________________________________________________ (City) ________________________________ (State) ______ (ZIP Code) ______________ Work Phone Number: ______________________________________________________ E-mail Address: ___________________________________________________________ THREE WAYS TO ENTER: 1. Click on the National Sleep Achievement Awards icon at www.advanceweb.com/respmanager, www.advanceweb.com/rcp, or www.advanceweb.com/sleep to submit your nomination online. 2. Mail your completed entry to: Mike Bederka, Managing Editor, National Sleep Achievement Awards, 2900 Horizon Drive, King of Prussia, PA 19406. 3. Fax your nomination to 610-275-8562, Attention: Mike Bederka. QUESTIONS? Contact Mike Bederka at 610-278-1400, ext. 1128, or [email protected]. NOMINATION SUBMITTED BY: Name & Credentials: ______________________________________________________ Title: ____________________________________________________________________ Facility: __________________________________________________________________ Facility Address: (Street) _____________________________________________________ (City) ________________________________ (State) ______ (ZIP Code) ______________ Work Phone Number: _______________________________________________________ E-mail Address: ___________________________________________________________ Number of People at Your Facility: ____________ EDUCATION OPPORTUNITIES JAN. 24-25, 2009 FEB. 6-7, 2009 FEB. 20-21, 2009 MIAMI, FL TUCSON, AZ AURORA, CO CRT/RRT Exam Reviews This two-day workshop is conducted by Gary Persing, BS, RRT. Gary is the Program Director in the Respiratory Care Program at Tulsa Community College and has been conducting exam review workshops since 1990. He conducts around 30 workshops a year at Respiratory Care Programs around the country. According to data provided by the programs who use Gary's workshop, over 90% of the students pass the CRT Exam on the first attempt and over 80% pass the RRT exams. The cost of the workshop is $200 which includes Gary's exam review textbook, Respiratory Care Exam Review, published by Elsevier. Contact: 866-206-1541; e-mail: [email protected] or visit www.respiratoryre viewworkshops.com for more information including workshop locations and Gary's new Home Study Audio Workshop. Preparing for the NBRC exams? BIG! ▲ ▲▲ Log on and SAVE Available 24 hours a day • Instant/real time Simulations • CRT and RRT Reviews • Exam-style Tests Only $19.95* *Monthly membership price. Cancel anytime! Total access to ALL of our online products. 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SET YOUR FOCUS: With more than 400 sessions, 800 speakers and 5,000 original research abstracts, attendees can sample a broad spectrum of topics or concentrate on critical care, sleep, allergy/immunology or another specialty related to respiratory medicine. PICK YOUR VENUE: From postgraduate courses to one-on-one interactions with world-renowned experts in the Clinicians Center, International Conference attendees can choose their learning environment. ATS 2009 San Diego • California MAY 15-20 Learn more about the program when registration opens during the third week of January 2009. You can view the Advance Program and register online by visiting the ATS Web site. If you would like a program mailed to you, please send us an e-mail. LEARN FROM THE BEST: The leading clinicians and researchers in pulmonary, critical care and sleep medicine will lead year in review sessions, lecture and participate in symposia and panel discussions. Many will also make themselves available for individual discussions with conference attendees. PRACTICE AT THE FOREFRONT: Translational science is the hallmark of the International Conference. No other meeting provides as much information about how the science of respiratory, critical care and sleep medicine is changing clinical practice. NETWORK: The ATS International Conference draws the most knowledgeable and dedicated healthcare providers and scientists from around the world and provides a collegial environment for exchanging ideas. It also affords an opportunity to meet fellows and for those at the beginning of their careers to meet leaders in the field. www.thoracic.org/go/international-conference [email protected] DON’T MISS EVEN ONE ISSUE OF ADVANCE CALL TODAY TO RENEW YOUR FREE SUBSCRIPTION. Comprehensive 10 Day Polysomnographic Training Courses Sleep Technologist Courses • 2009 Stony Brook University’s Respiratory Care Program of the School of Health Technology and Management offers continuing education certificate courses in sleep technology at the Health Sciences Center campus on Long Island, NY. plus 2 Day Scoring Workshops Spring Classes & RPSGT Review Workshops. Introduction to Polysomnography Scoring If you are considering a career as a sleep technician, this course can provide you with all the necessary training! If you are a physician interested in the field of sleep, we can provide you with entry level training. February 21 to 22 (Registration Deadline: February 6) Advanced Polysomnography March 7 to 8 (Registration Deadline: February 20) Polysomnography Exam Review Our next 10 day Course begins: January 26, 2009 March 14 to 15 (Registration Deadline: February 27) Visit us on the web for our full line of courses and workshops: www.schoolofsleepmedicine.com SPACE IS LIMITED SO REGISTER EARLY. Discounts available on groups of 3 or more. Introduction to Polysomnography Scoring April 4 to 5 (Registration Deadline: March 20) Advanced Polysomnography Scoring April 18 to 19 (Registration Deadline: April 3) One Week Polysomnography Course 800-355-1088 May 4 to May 8 (Registration Deadline: April 20) Call or log on today for details. 1.856.793.0318 ext. 152 www.schoolofsleepmedicine.com CALL TODAY 800-355-5627 FOR OPTIONS Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. LOOKING FOR A LOW-COST MAILER? Payment and registration form must be received by the deadline. To register, please visit www.hsc.stonybrook.edu/shtm/rcsleep/ index.cfm or call (631) 444-6654. www.advanceweb.com/rcp ❘ January 19, 2009 ❘ ADVANCE for Respiratory Care Practitioners 19 EMERGING RESEARCH No Longer ‘All in Their Heads’ By Shawn Proctor C ough expert Alyn Morice, MD, remembers a time when doctors simply dismissed patients’ complaints about chronic cough. It was psychosomatic, they argued. Some physicians still cling to this obsolete notion. “At the British Thoracic Society meeting last year, someone commented that it was all in their heads,” said Morice, head of cardiovascular and respiratory studies at Castle Hill Hospital in Cottingham, England. “That kind of ignorance makes me angry.” No one could blame doctors for hating chronic cough even more than their patients do: The condition remains difficult to treat and greatly misunderstood. European Respiratory Society (ERS) guidelines officially define chronic cough as a persistent cough lasting eight weeks or more. In the real world, it causes patients to skip personal activities like the movies and church. At work, they may feel embarrassed when coughing fits disrupt meetings or bother peers. For the 7 percent of the population affected by the condition, heightened cough reflex sensitivity can exacerbate their response to even minor stimuli. In short, persistent coughing leads to more coughing. After penning the ERS cough guidelines, Morice wanted to make the info accessible and easy for patients to use. His solution, the Online Cough Clinic (www.coughclinic.org. uk), gives U.K. residents a 16-question tool designed to assess the most likely cause of their cough. Since January 2006, a total of 9,340 patients have taken the questionnaire, he reported at the ERS Congress in October. One in three reported suffering from chronic cough for over a year and 13 percent for over five years. More than 75 percent of those who replied 20 to the follow-up survey said the recommended treatment helped their condition. Morice’s team plans to adapt the Online Cough Clinic for other countries. “This is like bypassing the ordinary physician and going to see an expert. And it’s better than traditional diagnoses because you get my opinion,” he added, laughing. Find the Cause Approaches to treating chronic cough have improved in recent years, thanks to a growing awareness of the condition in the medical community. However, diagnosis requires diligence, said Toni Kiljander, MD, PhD, head of respiratory medicine at Suomen Terveystalo in Turku, Finland. “We know now that cough is a symptom of underlying disease,” he said. “We treat the cough by focusing on treating the cause. Examination takes persistence because there is sometimes more than one cause.” Every patient who complains of chronic cough should receive, at minimum, a physical exam, spirometry and chest X-ray, Kiljander said. Depending on the results, additional investigation could include bronchoscopy, exhaled nitric oxide measurement, ADVANCE for Respiratory Care Practitioners ❘ January 19, 2009 ❘ www.advanceweb.com/rcp bronchoprovocation challenge and sputum culture. The most common causes of chronic cough are upper airway cough syndrome (which includes conditions that trigger the reflex), asthma and gastroesophageal reflux disease, according to the American College of Chest Physicians’ guidelines. Due to differences in the health care systems, true cough specialty clinics are scarce in the U.S. That means primary care doctors, who often by necessity use an empiric or educated “guess approach,” act as the frontline caregivers, said Brendan Canning, PhD, associate professor of medicine at the Johns Hopkins Asthma and Allergy Center in Baltimore. “They give patients corticosteroids based on a suspicion of asthma, and if the cough responds, then great. The diagnosis is asthma (but without any further diagnostic evidence for asthma). Labeling a patient asthmatic based on a cough that responded to corticosteroids is often incorrect,” he explained. “That being said, I don’t think treatment in the U.S. is worse. But it does frequently lack the careful workup characteristic of the clinics run by Morice and Kiljander in Europe.” Today, nearly every major pharmaceutical company has antitussive agents under development, and they may give patients with chronic cough more treatment options. Though far from Food and Drug Administration approval, new drugs targeting the bradykinin B2 and vanilloid 1 receptors offer the lowest hanging fruit, Canning said. For a country that spends $2 billion a year on useless cough syrups, any effective therapy would be welcome, he added. “Studies have shown that as formulated, the effects of these syrups are difficult to differentiate from placebo effects.” ■ Shawn Proctor, associate editor, can be reached at [email protected]. For resources, visit www.advanceweb.com/rcp and click on the “magazine” tab. JAY WILEY New Approaches Needed For Chronic Cough SPECIAL ADVERTISING SUPPLEMENT MANUFACTURER SPOTLIGHT Ventilators Becoming More Dynamic By ADVANCE Staff JAY WILEY E very year, caregivers hook up patients ranging from newborns to the elderly to lifesaving ventilators to provide temporary or permanent breathing support. Unfortunately, vents, even the most sophisticated models, are not problem-free and can cause lung injuries that are fatal or costly to correct. Human errors account for some injuries caused by ventilators, such as incorrect settings or disconnected alarms. But perhaps the most common problem is ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP), one form of hospital-acquired infection (HAI). Each year, almost 2 million patients contract an HAI in U.S. hospitals, resulting in a loss of nearly 100,000 lives and $20 billion in health care costs. Only urinary tract infections are more common than VAP in hospital settings. And while pneumonia comprises 15 percent of all HAIs, that figure jumps to 24 percent in cardiac care units and to 27 percent in intensive care units. The major risk factor for hospital-acquired pneumonia is mechanical ventilation. Needless to say, quick weaning is important in the struggle to circumvent VAP. At the same time, it is vital for clinicians to decrease the cost of care while still maintaining quality health care. Ventilator manufacturers have taken the lead in improving the safety and capabilities of the modern lifesaving machines, and some vendors have carved out specialty niches. Bunnell, for example, has crafted a jet vent for infants. “The vent has only three control settings and this makes it simple to use,” explained Dave Platt, director of sales and marketing for Bunnell. Versatility is also important in today’s hospital setting, so vent builders like Maquet, Draeger Medical and Newport Medical have crafted models suitable for both invasive and non-invasive care. Some are designed for potential use beyond hospital walls. Models like the Savina can be thrust into disaster situations, noted Marion Varec, senior marketing communications associate for Draeger. Ease of use becomes a major concern in every health care setting where in-services are time-consuming and staff and equipment are continually changed or upgraded. It should be no surprise new terminology is a given in the ventilator marketplace. Here are a few examples of terms bandied about by Michael Haspel, marketing manager for Hamilton Medical Inc., for inclusion in the 2009 respiratory therapist lexicon: ventilation autopilot, lung protective ventilation, human factors training, ventilation cockpit and intelligent ventilation. To this list, Maquet’s Marketing Manager Rich Peres adds his company’s entry: backward compatibility. Long gone are the days when therapists reverently uttered only Bird or Emerson terms in a subdued patient room. By contrast, modern ventilators need to move freely from the operating room and ICUs to a helicopter or ambulance for transport duties and then to a home care setting. Likewise, they must accommodate the tiniest premature babies with fragile lungs to morbidly obese adults where the very weight of the patient’s chest makes it difficult for clinicians to provide sufficient volume. Today’s ideal ventilator has to incorporate the needs of the patient, staff and institution and be equipped with a variety of modes to accommodate a long list of clinical conditions. At the same time, it should be quiet, interface seamlessly with the ventilated person and capable of responding on a breathby-breath basis to ever-changing oxygen demands. Optimally, any ventilator being added to a hospital fleet of equipment should be not only small and light but also sturdy and dependable. It should be self-contained and designed to inspire confidence in patients, their family members, nurses, therapists and physicians. It must be able to withstand spilled liquid, a sudden electrical surge or an accidental drop. Don’t forget, the equipment should be budget-friendly in the initial purchase and maintain that status during routine maintenance and upgrades. The latter is essential to keep equipment from becoming outdated in the fast-changing world of technology we inhabit. ■ Resource 1. Closing the Quality Gap: A Critical Analysis of Quality Improvement Strategies. Agency for Healthcare Research & Quality. Available from: URL: www.ahrq.gov. www.advanceweb.com/rcp ❘ January 19, 2009 ❘ ADVANCE for Respiratory Care Practitioners 21 Classified Employment Opportunities Faculty, Connecticut, Massachusetts ADVANCE for Respiratory Care Practitioners reaches over 45,000 active, qualified respiratory care practitioners nationwide every issue. Classified Employment ads are arranged geographically by state within each zone FACULTY NEW ENGLAND EDUCATIONAL OPPORTUNITIES Respiratory Therapists • CALIFORNIA • Make a contribution to the future of your profession. Enjoy your week-ends off and feel satisfied your work truly makes a difference! San Joaquin Valley College offers an advanced-level Respiratory Therapist program that leads to an associate of science degree (A.S. Degree in Respiratory Care Practice). We are currently seeking an exemplary candidate for the following position: RT Instructional Faculty Provide classroom instruction, laboratory integration, and participate in visitation of designated clinical sites and bedside clinical instruction. Job code: BAK/RT 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Faculty . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . New England . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Middle Atlantic . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Upper South Atlantic . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Lower South Atlantic . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . East South Central . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . East North Central . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . West North Central . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . West South Central. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Southwest . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Mountain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Pacific. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . US Territories . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . National . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . International . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . p. 22 p. 22 p. 23 p. 24 p. 24 p. — p. 24 p. — p. 24 p. — p. 26 p. 26 p. — p. 27 p. — Erythromycin May Reduce Exacerbations Long-term use of erythromycin may reduce the frequency of exacerbations in patients with moderate to severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease by as much as 35 percent, according to a study in December’s American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine. DON’T LET YOUR SUBSCRIPTION EXPIRE. CALL 800.355.1088 22 Minimum Requirements for Faculty: RRT credential; 3-5 yrs work exp, AA degree, CPR provider, and CA licensed and/or eligible for CA RCP license. Bedside clinical instruction affiliated with an accredited RT program may be substituted for clinical teaching exp. Strong organizational skills, verbal-written communications, resultsfocused, exemplary professional and work ethic, with demonstrated technical competence required. Apply online: http://jobs.sjvc.edu Submit resume w/ Job Code: [email protected]; Fax: (661) 8347407; SJVC, 201 New Stine Rd., Bakersfield, CA 93309. Application questions/help, call Jennifer Cox at (661) 834-0126 EOE (Part-time - Weekends Nights) Looking for a part-time opportunity? If you’re a Respiratory Therapist, The Hospital of Central Connecticut’s Bradley Memorial campus in Southington has just what you’re looking for. We are seeking a CT licensed Respiratory Therapist (CRTT or RRT required). We offer the Respiratory Care practitioner an exciting opportunity to expand their skills in Med/Surg, ICU, and the Emergency Department. Experience in an acute care setting required. Work 8-16 hours on weekend night shift (11 p – 7 a) and some holidays as needed. Please apply on-line at www.thocc.org or send your resume to: The Hospital of Central Connecticut, Bradley Memorial Campus, Human Resources Dept., 81 Meriden Ave., Southington, CT 06489 or fax to (860) 276-5058. Equal Opportunity Employer. M/F/D/V. at FEEL EMPOWERED TO MAKE A DIFFERENCE If you love Respiratory Therapy, you’ll love practicing at Spaulding Rehab REGISTERED RESPIRATORY THERAPISTS • Night shift (7pm-7:30am) full time 36 hour Part time 24 hour • W/E, Night shift (either every or alternate W/E’s) Premium Night & W/E Differential RESPONSIBILITIES INCLUDE: • Drawing & running Arterial Blood Gases • Ventilator Weaning • Trach Decanulation Protocol • Sleep Evaluation • Member of the Rapid Response Team Uncompensated Care Rises in 2007 Interested applicants please apply online at: U.S. hospitals provided $34 billion in uncompensated care in 2007, up from $31.2 billion in 2006, and nearly onethird of U.S. hospitals lost money on operations in 2007. Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital Network is a member of Partners HealthCare System & affiliated with Massachusetts General Hospital & Harvard Medical SchoolSpaulding has been ranked in the U.S. News & World Report’s “Best Hospitals” survey since 1995. www.spauldingrehab.org/careers Spaulding Rehab is an equal opportunity employer embracing the strength diveristy brings to the workplace. S PA U L D I N G R E H A B I L I TAT I O N H O S P I T A L N E T W O R K FAST • LOW-COST • FLEXIBLE • ADVANCE REPRINTS! CALL 800-355-5627 ADVANCE for Respiratory Care Practitioners ❘ January 19, 2009 www.advanceweb.com/RCP Connecticut, Massachusetts, Maine, New York, Pennsylvania Reaching Out We’ve all had points in our careers when we were lost. Needed help. Wanted guidance. I was the beneficiary of quite a bit of this wisdom early in my career. I was poked and prodded into becoming the therapist that I am today. Now the time has come for me to pass along the guidance and wisdom that I have acquired. We have a new grad that just joined our department. She is an exact version of me. It’s like looking into a mirror reflecting me five years ago when I was a terrified new grad. Now that she is in the workforce and without the benefit of someone to watch over her, she seriously doubts her choice of peds, even her choice in career. Will someone please stand up to help this poor lost RT? I will. I was there. That was me all over, no doubt about it. Everyone else seemed wiser, so much more knowledgeable. I had to have totally picked the worst career for me! I felt like I would never get the experience that I needed without looking like a complete moron. … —Excerpted from the “Peds’ Place” blog by Stephanie Scarbrough, RRT. To read more, visit www.advanceweb. com/rcp and click on the “community" tab. $6,000 - $8,500 IN SIGN-ON BONUSES 4PVUIXFTUFSO$5t)VETPO7BMMFZ3FHJPO/:t-POH*TMBOE/: Imagine a workplace where your needs are taken care of and support is at your fingertips. It is a reality with SleepTech. Contact us for more information about openings for experienced or RPSGT sleep professionals. DBSFFST!TMFFQUFDIDPNtXXXTMFFQUFDIDPN INQUIRE ABOUT ENTRY LEVEL OPPORTUNITIES For a lifetime of caring MID COAST HOSPITAL WE ALL STRIVE FOR Mid Coast Hospital, located in beautiful mid coast Maine, has the following positions available: our personal best. ★ POLYSOMNOGRAPHY TECHNOLOGIST 24 hr/wk, nights ★ RESPIRATORY THERAPIST 36 hr/wk, 7p-7a Respiratory Therapist Part-time position with benefits, 24 hours (two 12 hr shifts), 7am-7pm, w/every 3rd weekend rotation. This position assesses, plans, organizes and administers respiratory therapy diagnostic and therapeutic procedures in accordance with physicians’ treatment plans and ensures operation and maintenance of all respiratory therapy equipment. MA licensure is required. 1 year of previous related experience is preferred. Please forward your resume to: Winchester Hospital Human Resources 41 Highland Avenue Winchester, MA 01890 fax: (781) 756-2908 online: www.winchesterhospital.org or call our 24-Hour Jobline: (781) 306-1009 Award winning careers. Closer than you think. ORDER ARTICLE REPRINTS CALL 800-355-5627 MIDDLE ATLANTIC Respiratory Therapist RRT/CRT Needed Per diem day and night shift positions available • New Grads Welcome • 12-hour Shifts • Excellent Salary • On-site Parking Contact: Ana Perez/Director of Respiratory Care at Fax: 718-681-4820 E-mail: [email protected] 1072 Grand Concourse Bronx, NY 10456 RPSGT, Registry Eligible or exp. PSG Tech www.winchesterhospital.org EOE RENEW YOUR FREE SUBSCRIPTION TO www.advanceweb.com/RCP To apply and for more information: www.midcoasthealth.com/jobs Forward your resume to: Mid Coast Health Services Human Resources 123 Medical Center Drive • Brunswick, ME 04011 or by fax to: (207) 373-6744 An affiliate of Mid Coast Health Services An Equal Opportunity Employer REVIVE YOUR CAREER FT and PT night positions to staff our clinical sites in PA, MD and NY. Comp salary and benefits. Positions currently available in the central PA area. Dave Brooks, Respitech Medical,Inc. ph: 866.251.7451 fax: 866.741.8455 [email protected] January 19, 2009 ❘ ADVANCE for Respiratory Care Practitioners 23 Virginia, Maryland, Florida, Illinois, Texas UPPER SOUTH ATLANTIC LOWER SOUTH ATLANTIC Kids believe in miracles. And so do we. Experience Better Ways with Carilion Put your RT career on the fast track to success with an award-winning healthcare leader headquartered in Roanoke, Va. Visit www.carilionclinic.com to learn more about how we reward our employees from hire to retire by providing them with a Total Rewards package including competitive pay, comprehensive benefits and employee recognition. EEO/AA Join All Children’s Hospital in St. Petersburg, Florida, where making miracles happen is all in a day’s work. We’re an award-winning tertiary center for pediatric treatment, teaching, research and advocacy. We’re currently seeking the following professionals to join our team: Pediatric Respiratory Therapists 12 hr shifts & Per Diem Candidates must have Florida licensure and CRTT with 2 years Critical Care experience or RRT with 1 year Critical Care experience. Pediatric/Neonatal ICU experience preferred. Apply Online Today: www.allkids.org St. Petersburg, Florida Creating healthy tomorrows... for one child, for All Children. EOE EAST NORTH CENTRAL To end each day with your heart soaring and your face beaming takes more than skill. It takes passionate caring. Experience it for yourself at Centegra Health System, where we truly live our values of genuine respect, passionate caring and a joyful spirit. w w w. f r a n k l i n s q u a r e . o r g Respiratory Care Practitioners Registered or Certified • Night & Registry positions available One of the largest... and the best. Franklin Square Hospital Center is a 357-bed teaching facility located in Eastern Baltimore County. We are the third-largest hospital in Maryland, providing a comprehensive array of services with top-of-the-line technology. Currently, we have excellent opportunities to work with a great staff. Respiratory Therapists do you value? Candidates must be a CRT or currently enrolled, or have completed an approved school of respiratory therapy; up to 1 year experience preferred. We provide great career opportunities with exceptional compensation and benefits, and one of the best workplaces in all of health care. To learn more and apply, visit: www.centegra.org or call Julie Glombicki at 815-759-4365. “Every day, when I get home, my kids ask, ‘Did you help a lot of people today?’” EOE M/F/D/V (Full Time, Day Shift) Must have completed a Respiratory Therapy Program. MD license required, as well as CRT or RRT certification. 1-2 years of experience preferred, but new grads will be considered. We offer highly competitive salaries and benefits, including health, dental and vision insurance, life insurance, disability coverage, tuition reimbursement and more. For more information and to apply, call Judy Sakalas at 443-777-7232, or visit our website at: www.franklinsquare.org EOE { ADVANCE } NOBODY DOES IT BETTER THAN THE BEST WWW.ADVANCEWEB.COM 24 What Due to rapidly increasing volume, we currently have full-time, night & registry positions available. Primary responsibilities include providing intensive and general floor therapeutic and diagnostic services; assessing patients; implementing and evaluating respiratory care plans; and making recommendations towards optimum treatment selection. WEST SOUTH CENTRAL BEAUTIFUL TEXAS HILL COUNTRY PETERSON REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER in Kerrville, Texas is looking for a full-time LEAD RESPIRATORY THERAPIST. Under the direction of the Supervisor/Director of the Cardiopulmonary Dept., the Lead Therapist will be responsible for providing optimal diagnostic and therapeutic cardiopulmonary care on their assigned shift. Provides leadership, clinical expertise and serves as a role model for staff. RRT or CRT with at least 4 years of clinical/ diagnostic experience. Lead/Supervisory exp. preferred. • Competitive Salary • Tuition and Continuing Education Assistance • Weekend rotation at premium pay • Comprehensive Benefit Package Beautiful community built along the Guadalupe River just 60 miles north of San Antonio. Contact: 830 258 7440 www.petersonrmc.com ADVANCE for Respiratory Care Practitioners is on Facebook! Visit www.advanceweb.com/rcp and click on the “Find Us on Facebook” link. ADVANCE for Respiratory Care Practitioners ❘ January 19, 2009 www.advanceweb.com/RCP What Makes a Good Clinical Educator? Let’s see, I remember my clinical rotations in 1983: “Here’s your buddy you will be going with, and here is your assignment list.” If I had any questions, all I had to do was ask my buddy. After all, that is how the hospital staffed half of its respiratory work force. Now I don’t think there is anyone out there that would agree this is how to teach a therapist, but I do believe to some degree it still happens. Students become the floor care jockeys. Hospitals under the staffing crunch may be tempted to this type of practice, but students and academic facilities stand firm. Hospital directors, we are only hurting ourselves. This is our future respiratory therapist. Don’t use the students for equipment techs or send them off as floor staff therapists. Or even worse, sitting in a blood gas room or PFT lab reading a magazine for the day. … —Excerpted from “The RC Director’s Chair” blog by Scott E. Leonard, MBA, RRT. To read more, visit www.advanceweb.com/rcp and click on the “community” tab. NUS O B N O N IG $5,000 S Texas Covenant Health System, the largest health system between Dallas and Los Angeles, is located in Lubbock, Texas (population 210,000). Covenant has over 1,300 beds, 5,500 employees and 600 admitting physicians. Home to Texas Tech University, Lubbock boasts a thriving economy, low cost of living, and a superior public school system. Respiratory Therapist Relocation Assistance, Impressive Benefits, 401K • Certified or Registered Respiratory Therapists • Areas include SICU, MICU, Level II Trauma Center and Cardiac Care • Covenant Children’s Hospital respiratory care includes 34 subacute beds, 12 PICU beds, ECMO, and Pediatric heart program • First Pediatric Level II Trauma Center in Texas • Level II NICU • Countless Continuing Education opportunities, including quarterly skills fairs and ventilator conference Please apply online and send resume: www.covenanthealth.org Covenant Health System Attn: HR Recruiting 3615 19th St, Lubbock, TX 79410 Phone: 806-725-4220 Fax: 806-723-7189 At Southwest General, we recognize our employees are our most valuable asset. Here you’ll find an environment where your opinions matter and your ideas will make a difference. Known as the most enchanting city in the southwest, San Antonio offers breathtaking landscapes and an abundance of shopping, dining and recreational activities including Sea World, Fiesta Texas, and the world famous River Walk. Respiratory Therapists & Certified Respiratory Therapists - Full-time and Flex positions available for evening shifts. Registered or eligible for the registry through the National Board of Respiratory Care, Licensed by the Texas Department of Health as a Respiratory Care Practitioner. Current CPR certification required with ACLS and NRP required. Previous experience in NICU Transport Team desired. We offer an exceptional benefits package that includes generous tuition reimbursement program, continuing education opportunities and relocation assistance. JOB NOW? EOE Visit Our Exciting Respiratory Forums NE CALL THE ADVANCE JOB HOTLINE AT 800.355.6504 FOR OPENINGS IN YOUR AREA AND ACROSS THE NATION. If you’d like to explore this opportunity, please visit www.swgeneralhospital.com or call Human Resources at 210-921-3437 ED NEED A NEW SUBSCRIBE TODAY! www.advanceweb.com/RCP CALL 800-355-5627 Chat with your peers on myriad topics. Stop by our bustling online network at www.advanceweb.com/rcp and click on the “community” tab. January 19, 2009 ❘ ADVANCE for Respiratory Care Practitioners 25 Wyoming, California, Nevada MOUNTAIN HUMBOLDT GENERAL HOSPITAL FULL-TIME REGISTERED POLYSOMNOGRAPHER AND RESPIRATORY THERAPIST POSITIONS AVAILABLE 2100 W. Sunset, Riverton, WY 82501 (307) 857-3465 or Fax (307) 857-3586 Web site: www.riverton-hospital.com Human Resources E-mail: [email protected] RESPIRATORY THERAPIST Competitive salary DOE; excellent benefits including Public Employees Retirement System, group health insurance, accrued PTO and sick leave, and no state income tax. Discover a great place to live and work, 74 miles from Oregon border and three hours from Lake Tahoe. Modern, rural 52-bed facility in Northern Nevada. Mail, fax or email resume to: Lofty mountains, clear lakes, natural beauty = a perfect vacation. In Central WY it’s a way of life! Our 70-bed, acute care facility is located near the Wind River Mountains. Join our healthcare team of over 200 employees who have chosen RMH. We offer Medical, Dental, Vision, Life, AD&D, STD, LTD, EAP, 401(k), PTO, EIB, a competitive salary, a $6,000 professional recruitment bonus, and a great working environment. EEO Employer Human Resources Humboldt General Hospital 118 E. Haskell St., Winnemucca, Nevada 89445 (775) 623-5222 or fax (775) 623-5904 [email protected] EOE PACIFIC WWW.ADVANCEWEB.COM UPLIFT Trial Results San Joaquin Valley College http://jobs.sjvc.edu (See our ad on page 22.) FIND THOUSANDS OF JOBS ON www.advanceweb.com 26 Become a fan of ADVANCE for Respiratory Care Practitioners! Check us out on Facebook. Visit www.advanceweb.com/rcp and click on the “Find Us on Facebook” link. ADVANCE for Respiratory Care Practitioners ❘ January 19, 2009 One of the largest COPD trials ever undertaken reaffirmed the clinical safety of tiotropium, a commonly prescribed corticosteroid, according to a study presented at the European Respiratory Society Annual Congress in Berlin. Researchers in the Understanding Potential Long-term Impacts on Function with Tiotropium (UPLIFT) trial enrolled nearly 6,000 patients in 37 countries, who were randomized to receive the drug or a placebo. In both arms, patients were allowed to continue with their normally prescribed respiratory medications, including dose adjustments throughout the trial, except inhaled anticholinergics. Results indicated that the tiotropium group experienced significantly reduced risk of exacerbations leading to hospitalizations. Yet, the UPLIFT trial showed no treatment differences in the rate of decline of trough or postbronchodilator FEV1, the primary objective of the study. “The patients at the end of the trial are better than they were at the beginning, in terms of quality of life,” said Marc Decramer, MD, PhD, the study’s lead author. “You win about four years by giving the treatment.” www.advanceweb.com/RCP Alaska, National Bring Your Career to beautiful Ketchikan, Alaska NATIONAL Staff Respiratory Therapist Must be a graduate of a two-year AMA approved Respiratory Care Program and registered or registryeligible by the National Board for Respiratory Care. Apply online: www.peacehealth.org or email: 6&ULVFROD#3HDFH+HDOWKRUJ Call: 888-890-8301 x1 WE OFFER: Competitive Salary ([FHOOHQW%HQH¿WV Relocation Available! EOE Time to Tidy Up It’s time to look at inventory. Time to see what works and what doesn’t; what’s outdated and what’s still OK. It’s time to wonder why we ordered some things during the year, laugh at how our expectations were way too high on others, and make our wish lists for the next year. It’s time to rearrange departments to the way they were a year ago when we straightened them up for the Joint Commission, or to rearrange them to a new, more efficient office that will make use of space. Clutter in the office is the most common cause of housekeeping headaches. Seems obvious, but looking in some respiratory offices, you would think no one knew that but me. Each office has the packrat. Each office has the chronic food nibbler and drinker. Fortunately, each office usually has a person to pick up after the others. … —Excerpted from the “In My Opinion” blog by Jim Thacker, CRT, AE-C. To read more, visit www.advanceweb.com/rcp and click on the “community” tab. The Sign of a Titan Client Great jobs, great locations and awesome benefits that will put a smile on your face. • Great Pay • Private Housing • Matching 401k • Paid Vacation • Medical/Dental Great jobs, great locations, aweBenefits & More Call us today to learn more about ourof some benefits and we take care nationwide temporary/permanent nt you. Call staffi us today to learn healthcare ng opportunities. While you take care of patients, more. Titan will take care of you. Apply online at www.titanmed.com • 866.332.9600 “Your Healthcare Staffing Solution” RENEW YOUR FREE SUBSCRIPTION TODAY! CALL 800.355.1088 www.advanceweb.com/RCP January 19, 2009 ❘ ADVANCE for Respiratory Care Practitioners 27 National doing what you love is important. So is feeling appreciated. You became a healthcare professional because it gave you satisfaction. Maybe you knew you’d enjoy helping people, the challenge, the feeling of accomplishment. You also knew you’d appreciate the pay. CLUB STAFFING is a national leader in allied healthcare staffing. Tell us what you’re looking for, and we’ll tell you about attractive compensation and benefits packages with respected healthcare organizations throughout the country. Ask about our exclusive compensation and benefits package: • National opportunities • Excellent pay • Bonuses • 401K • Health, dental & vision • Free private housing • Car allowances & per diems • CEU & licensure reimbursement 888.367.0309 / clubstaffing.com exceptional healthcare. delivered. My Night in a Grey's Anatomy Episode On a recent episode of Grey’s Anatomy, one of the residents, Dr. Yang, found an area of the hospital that was like heaven to her. When she stumbled into dermatology to get a cream, Dr. Yang saw residents getting massages. She found them pouring water infused with raspberries. They had time to relax and get facials. She was so fascinated she paged her friends to come watch, in her words, the “freak-fest.” I laughed the whole thing off, thinking it wasn’t possible. Not in a hectic hospital. No way—so I thought. ... —Excerpted from “Peds' Place” blog by Stephanie Scarbrough, RRT. To read more, visit www.advanceweb.com/rcp and click on the “community” tab. 28 ADVANCE for Respiratory Care Practitioners ❘ January 19, 2009 www.advanceweb.com/RCP National BRPT Offers Webcast On Application Process The Board of Registered Polysomnographic Technologists now offers “For Aspiring RPSGTs: The Application Process.” The free, ondemand, 30-minute Webcast gives applicants who want to enhance their career by becoming a credentialed sleep technologist the inside track on eligibility, the application process and common pitfalls with advice from Becky Appenzeller, RPSGT, REEGT, CNIM, BPRT president. “We want to encourage sleep technologists to apply and to pass the RPSGT test,” Appenzeller said. “We hope the Webcast helps take the mystery out of the process and makes it easier to take the first step.” For more info, visit www.brpt.org. www.advanceweb.com/RCP January 19, 2009 ❘ ADVANCE for Respiratory Care Practitioners 29 BARELY BREATHING By Brent Swager, RRT Top 10 Reasons to Like Being a Therapist up much’ reason.” I was a little relieved when my beeper jolted to life and announced an impending emergency on the sixth floor. I’ve always been better doing rather than thinking. “I like it that you don’t ever get to sit down and eat an entire meal,” I told Carl as we raced down the hall and through a door to the stairwell. “You don’t have to worry about getting fat as an RT.” “Hey, that’s a good point,” Carl panted as he pounded up the steps behind me, jotting a note as we ran. He studied the page as we rounded the fourth floor and started in on the stairs to the fifth. “Only nine more reasons to go.” Five intense minutes later, I fanned my sweaty scrub top away from my chest and grinned. “I like saving lives,” I said. “I think that’s it,” Carl agreed. “The rest is just icing on the cake.” ■ Brent Swager is a Florida practitioner. Advertiser Index 3 WAYS TO GET THE INFORMATION YOU NEED...FAST! 1. Log on: Get the information you need... fast! Our searchable online BUYERS GUIDE allows you to receive detailed information regarding companies and products, as well as submit requests for free info. Just log onto www.advanceweb.com/rcp, and reference the tab for ‘Product Info’ which will take you to the Buyers Guide. For CE Opportunities, go to the EDUCATION/EVENTS tab. 2. Mail/Fax: Circle the corresponding Ad# on the postage-paid reply card and mail today. Or fax the card to (610) 278-1426 for faster service. 3. Phone: Call the ADVANCE Product Hotline at (800) 355-6504. When calling in information, please have available the date of the publication for an accurate response. ADVERTISER/WEB PRODUCT NAME American Thoracic Society Draeger Medical Incorporated Kettering National Seminars Maquet Incorporated Med Way Merion Publications Incorporated Merion Publications Incorporated Merion Publications Incorporated Merion Publications Incorporated Merion Publications Incorporated Nonin Medical Incorporated RC Educational Consulting Services, Inc. Southmedic SUNY at Stony Brook Tutorial Systems ATS 2009... Technology for Life.... National Review Seminars... 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CIR.# PG # 015 005 011 020 012 004 007 003 009 010 018 014 019 013 021 19 11 18 9 18 13 IBC 17 5-6 7 IFC 18 BC 19 18 Sneak Peek Products For more information, write the matching product number on the lines below and return it by FAX or you may also call our Product Hotline at: 800-355-6504. 1. _______ Name Facility Address Phone 30 ADVANCE for Respiratory Care Practitioners ❘ January 19, 2009 ❘ www.advanceweb.com/rcp 2. _______ 3. _______ 4. _______ 5. _______ 6. _______ Title City E-mail: State Zip RC 1/19/09 “HEY, WHAT’S THAT you’re writing?” I asked, and made a slow grab for Carl’s pad. “Stop it,” Carl snapped and slapped my hand away. “I was reading this book about how to live up to your potential,” he explained after calming down. “It said the way to determine if you’re in the right profession is to sit down and write 10 things you like about your job. If you can’t, you’re probably in the wrong profession.” “Well, heck,” I laughed, “I could think of 10 things I don’t like about this job. That’s easy.” “Really?” Carl said with genuine surprise. “Nah, just joking,” I admitted. “I love this job. I bet I can name 10 reasons to love it without even thinking.” “Do it then,” Carl smiled, flipping a page to record my thoughts. “I will,” I said, but as soon as the promise left my mouth, all thought dried up. I did the only thing I could. I stalled. “I will,” I repeated. “Just let me eat this delicious Chicken Tampico first. Don’t want it to get cold now, do we?” I chewed the greasy, fried chicken smothered in melted cheese and topped with ketchup while I thought. “Here’s one,” I said. “I like the immediacy of this profession. I like knowing that almost every night I walk through these doors, I have the opportunity to make a difference in someone’s life. Are you going to write that one down?” “Nope,” he said. “Why not?” I cried. “That was a really good one.” “I can’t spell ‘immediacy,’” he said. “OK,” I said, “we’ll find a reason with smaller words.” “Good,” Carl said and we resumed eating and thinking. “Oh, I know,” he said. “We make good money.” “Well, yes,” I tentatively agreed. “It’s good, but not as good as nurses and doctors.” “Good but not great,” Carl echoed as he carefully wrote. He peered at the words. “That’s a good but not a great reason though.” “Right,” I said as he erased. “Here’s one,” I said. “We don’t get vomited on much.” I wiped the front of my scrubs where I clearly recalled a patient had thrown up on me a few days earlier. “OK, forget that one too.” “Are you two taking the rest of the day off?” the department director asked pointedly as he passed by our table. “You always have someone to keep your ego from getting too big,” Carl noted. “While that’s true, I’m not sure it’s something I like about being an RT,” I countered. “And by the way,” the director backtracked and stood next to us, “there’s a new invention you two should discover: It’s called an iron.” He arched an eyebrow and moved to a faraway table. “I like the wrinkled look,” I said as Carl furiously erased. “Darn,” he mumbled. “There goes my ‘You don’t have to dress From the publishers of ADVANCE Newsmagazines “This shirt fits very well and is so soft.” – Amanda P. 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