He will need to be admitted to a paediatric ICU and will require access to a respirator, such is the nature and degree of his vulnerability.
There's not much to using them.having ventilators is one thing, though I'd be focused more on whether we have the desired number of appropriately trained staff to operate these
I'm writing about a specific child known to me, a child with a partial trisomy-9p and a partial monosomy-10q with both a compromised immune system and an impaired respiratory system as well as other complications. If readers are stupid enough to extrapolate from a specific child to the population in general and panic, then that is hardly my fault.Please stop spreading panic and misinformation. No children have died from this. Almost all patients with moderate and severe cases have been adults
Every ICU nurse should be trained on them anyway. Putting a patient on one doesn't take a huge amount of time and then it's a case of monitoring the outputs. Personnelle won't be the issue, machines will be.@Purple - for someone with training, I assume you mean?
Not planning to have a go!Manual for one system for anyone else curious enough.
Not planning to have a go!
Please stop spreading panic and misinformation. No children have died from this. Almost all patients with moderate and severe cases have been adults
The good news is that there are plenty of respirators. It's Ventilators that they are short of.He will need to be admitted to a paediatric ICU and will require access to a respirator, such is the nature and degree of his vulnerability.