Emergency Management of the Coding Patient: Cases, Algorithms, Evidence offers students, interns, and residents an understanding of the protocols and procedures surrounding hospital codes. Concise, practical, and clinically-oriented, this book covers the basics of ACLS, as well as non-cardiac codes, and, more importantly, reviews the leadership skills, knowledge, and teamwork that are critical in successfully managing these difficult situations.
This innovative resource encompasses all the clinical skills required to run a hospital code, including:
- Suggestions for how to organize a code team
- Review of essential equipment
- Case-based training in cardiac rhythm strip interpretation
- Algorithmic approach to running codes
- Administration of resuscitative medications
- Accompanying pocket card summarizing code algorithms with necessary medications (including dosages)
Based around clinical scenarios, Emergency Management of the Coding Patient reviews the basic knowledge needed to manage codes effectively and efficiently: pathophysiology, treatment, medications, and skills. In addition to the case scenarios that begin each chapter, the appendix of practice cases highlights key concepts and helps build confidence to manage a real coding patient. The book includes a pocket-sized laminated card summarizing the algorithms presented in the book, along with the medications (with dosages) needed for each code situation.
Special Features:
- Describes the protocols and procedures surrounding hospital codes
- Interactive clinical vignettes of common coding scenarios for practical review
- Covers the basics of how to approach codes: pathophysiology, treatment, medications, and clinical skills
- Pocket-sized laminated card contains the critical algorithms for protocols and treatment of ACLS and non-cardiac codes
- Medication appendix for easy reference
About the Authors Michael Filbin, MD has authored 2 Blueprints books for Blackwell: Blueprints Clinical Cases in Emergency Medicine and Blueprints Notes & Cases Pathophysiology: Pulmonary, Gastrointestinal, and Rheumatology. He is an Attending in the emergency department at Massachusetts General Hospital. Prior to going to medical school he worked at NASA at the Johnson Space Center.
Emily Senecal, MD is Chief Resident of the Harvard-Affiliated Emergency Medicine Residency at Brigham & Women’s Hospital and Massachusetts General Hospital. She has an undergraduate degree from Princeton University and a medical degree from Stanford.