this post was submitted on 14 Dec 2024
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No Stupid Questions

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[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 week ago (1 children)

That's pretty much exactly what I was told back when narcan first started being available easily for pain patients and such. There's too many factors involved to piss around with trying to calculate anything in the time you have available to make it work, so you just give more and pump that damn chest.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 6 days ago (1 children)

There is no maximum dose of Narcan and more won't harm a person. The general guideline is every 2-3 minutes until revival or death.

Chest compressions can kill an overdosing person if their heart is still beating, so not always chest compressions. This is the scariest decision to me...

I've worked in crisis shelters so I have wayyyyyyy more exposure to OD'ing people than anybody ever should :(

[–] [email protected] 1 points 6 days ago

Damn. I've only been around a few, what with home health patients making maybe mistakes and playing gopher in the local ER. It was actually worse, for me, than stuff like strokes or heart attacks. There's just this extra edge of "wtf" to it.

Luck of the draw, the first day I was in the ER, still 17 and a student, the third patient I "helped" with, I actually had to help with. 14yo OD, pregnant and wanting to escape it all. She was not quite conscious, but not as far out as I saw later on. But she was fighting everyone trying to put a tube in, so the big kid got pointed out to hold her legs.

After that, it was a lot less panic, but a lot more uncertainty on my end. Compared to that kind of thing, finding a patient in bed barely alive was more about not being sure what to do, which is what made it worse for me. At least with a stroke, there wasn't any uncertainty, no way I could screw up. Well, I guess that's not true, but it felt that way.

I don't envy the folks that deal with ODs regularly, much less a crisis shelter worker.