Short Description: This primer on mechanical ventilation provides health care professionals with …
Short Description: This primer on mechanical ventilation provides health care professionals with a comprehensive yet clear overview of the theory of ventilation, initial settings and titration, ventilation modes, and effective decision-making based on Ideal Body Weight, safe tidal volume ranges, and arterial blood gases. Using straightforward language, everyday object lessons, and interactive self-checks, this book aims to make the basics of ventilation more accessible to non-specialist healthcare professionals. By the end of this book, learners will understand how ventilation works from initial patient assessment to weaning.
Long Description: Health care professionals often lack sufficient training on ventilators, yet they encounter them frequently in their daily practice. This primer on mechanical ventilation aims to demystify the study of mechanical ventilation, in order to make the topic more accessible to non-specialist health care professionals. The book provides a thorough overview of the theory of ventilation, ventilation modes, how to use ventilator settings to achieve goals, selecting settings for Ideal Body Weight, safe tidal volume ranges, and arterial blood gases. Learners can use the interactive self-checks to assess their progress. By the end of this book, the reader will understand how ventilation works from initial patient assessment to weaning–thereby equipping them to work with ventilators effectively under the supervision of, or in the absence of, a respiratory therapist or other supervising clinician.
Word Count: 49586
(Note: This resource's metadata has been created automatically by reformatting and/or combining the information that the author initially provided as part of a bulk import process.)
Introduction:In Indai there are many death occures during neonate period.Todays tome neonatal …
Introduction:In Indai there are many death occures during neonate period.Todays tome neonatal mortality rate of India is 29.By 2020 target is to rduce mortality from 29 to 16.In India only Kerala has single digit neonatal mortality rate and that is 9.What is the role of Indian Academy of Pediatrics and National neonatal ForumGolden minute project says first one minute after birth of a newborn is very crucial.If first one minute is utilised death or disability is prevented.Go through some materialSee the videoneonatal resuscitation
In this activity, students learn about their heart rate and different ways …
In this activity, students learn about their heart rate and different ways it can be measured. Students construct a simple measurement device using clay and a toothpick, and then use this device to measure their heart rate under different circumstances (i.e., sitting, standing and jumping). Students make predictions and record data on a worksheet.
Beau Bokan decided early on that drugs would not bring him happiness …
Beau Bokan decided early on that drugs would not bring him happiness and success. The lead singer of blessthefall resisted peer pressure and rose above his neighborhood. After completing the Beau Bokan worksheet, encourage students to share their natural highs by having them hashtag #LiveNaturallyHigh on their social media accounts.
How to use our resources: 1) Watch a dynamic video featuring a powerful, personal story 2) Discuss the video in a group using provided discussion guides 3) Engage in deeper learning through fun, interactive activities that reinforce the concepts from the video.
Teacher resources, MS and HS lessons on fake pills made of fentanyl …
Teacher resources, MS and HS lessons on fake pills made of fentanyl - fentapills. Deaths from fake pills with fentanyl are surging across the country and right here in our own school district. In the past 18 months, we've lost several students to fentanyl-related poisonings — teenagers who had hopes and dreams and plans. These teenagers had families who loved them and are still coming to grips with their losses.
Teens are purchasing what they think are OxyContin, Percoset or Xanax pills via social media, but drug dealers are making these fake pills with the cheaper, stronger and more deadly synthetic drug called fentanyl to increase their profits. Fentanyl is up to 50 times more potent than heroin and 100 times more potent than morphine. Fentanyl is odorless, tasteless and colorless. Teens never know what they’re getting. One pill can kill them. One pill.
This patient education program reviews the anatomy of the facial nerve, and …
This patient education program reviews the anatomy of the facial nerve, and the causes and symptoms of Bell's Palsy. This resource is a MedlinePlus Interactive Health Tutorial from the National Library of Medicine, designed and developed by the Patient Education Institute.
Psychology courses help students to implement the chunks of the undertaken researches …
Psychology courses help students to implement the chunks of the undertaken researches into their lives for the development of a metacognitive and multifaceted approach for their better self-development, identities, relationships, and decisions.
Companion Site for Harvard Medical School Canvas Network MOOC Best Practices for …
Companion Site for Harvard Medical School Canvas Network MOOC Best Practices for Biomedical Research Data Management. This Open Science Framework project site includes all the materials contained in the Canvas course including: readings and resources; slide presentations; video lectures; activity outlines; research case studies and questions; and quiz questions with answer guide.
Biomedical research today is not only rigorous, innovative and insightful, it also …
Biomedical research today is not only rigorous, innovative and insightful, it also has to be organized and reproducible. With more capacity to create and store data, there is the challenge of making data discoverable, understandable, and reusable. Many funding agencies and journal publishers are requiring publication of relevant data to promote open science and reproducibility of research.
In order to meet to these requirements and evolving trends, researchers and information professionals will need the data management and curation knowledge and skills to support the access, reuse and preservation of data.
This course is designed to address present and future data management needs.
Bethany Hamilton, professional surfer, talks about how surfing has helped her to …
Bethany Hamilton, professional surfer, talks about how surfing has helped her to stay naturally high. She shares how adversity has made her stronger and how gratitude has helped her face new challenges.
How to use our resources: 1) Watch a dynamic video featuring a powerful, personal story 2) Discuss the video in a group using provided discussion guides 3) Engage in deeper learning through fun, interactive activities that reinforce the concepts from the video.
Having survived a shark attack that left her without an arm, Bethany …
Having survived a shark attack that left her without an arm, Bethany Hamilton’s passion for life and surfing stayed strong, leading her to victories in her field. After completing the Bethany Hamilton worksheet, encourage students to share their natural highs by having them hashtag #LiveNaturallyHigh on their social media accounts.
How to use our resources: 1) Watch a dynamic video featuring a powerful, personal story 2) Discuss the video in a group using provided discussion guides 3) Engage in deeper learning through fun, interactive activities that reinforce the concepts from the video.
This resource is a video abstract of a research paper created by …
This resource is a video abstract of a research paper created by Research Square on behalf of its authors. It provides a synopsis that's easy to understand, and can be used to introduce the topics it covers to students, researchers, and the general public. The video's transcript is also provided in full, with a portion provided below for preview:
"Brain scans are powerful tools for diagnosing disease, monitoring treatment, and conducting basic biological research. But slight head movements can impair image quality. Now, researchers have devised an improved method to significantly reduce this problem for a dual scanning technique called magnetic resonance – positron emission tomography, or MR-PET. Magnetic resonance, the basis of MRI scanning, builds images from the response of selected atoms in the body to radio waves under a strong magnetic field. Positron emission tomography, PET, builds images by detecting particles called positrons released by radioactive tracers after they are allowed to spread through the body. MR-PET combines the two techniques, offering advantages over either alone. But it takes a long time, as much as 90 minutes, to acquire the data to create MR-PET images. So, image-blurring artefacts and quantitative errors due to head movements can become a problem..."
The rest of the transcript, along with a link to the research itself, is available on the resource itself.
This resource is a video abstract of a research paper created by …
This resource is a video abstract of a research paper created by Research Square on behalf of its authors. It provides a synopsis that's easy to understand, and can be used to introduce the topics it covers to students, researchers, and the general public. The video's transcript is also provided in full, with a portion provided below for preview:
"Learning something new not only changes our perspectives and behavior – it actually changes the structure of our brains. Memories and experiences are recorded in the brain by altering the physical connections between neurons. Until recently, however, the protein signals that cause these tiny structural changes were too small to measure with available imaging methods. But researchers at the Max Planck Florida Institute for Neuroscience created ultra-sensitive sensors and revealed the activity of two of the proteins that write memories into neural circuits in the brain. Individual neurons have many branches, or dendrites. And each dendrite can be covered with thousands of tiny bumps called spines, where messages are received from other neurons. Changes in spine size are one way memories are recorded-when lots of messages are being passed and a spine is very active, it gets bigger. Many proteins need to be activated to make spines grow..."
The rest of the transcript, along with a link to the research itself, is available on the resource itself.
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