Nurses In Heat

⚡ ALL INFORMATION CLICK HERE 👈🏻👈🏻👈🏻
Nurses In Heat
Clipboard, Search History, and several other advanced features are temporarily unavailable.
Dashboard
Publications
Account settings
Log out
Advanced
Clipboard
Format
Abstract
PubMed
PMID
Format:
Summary (text)
PubMed
PMID
Abstract (text)
CSV
Subject:
1 selected item: 24673014 - PubMed
Format:
Summary
Summary (text)
Abstract
Abstract (text)
Create a new collection
Add to an existing collection
Name must be less than 100 characters
Unable to load your collection due to an error
Please try again
Unable to load your delegates due to an error
Please try again
Would you like email updates of new search results?
Saved Search Alert Radio Buttons
Yes
No
Frequency:
Monthly
Weekly
Daily
Which day?
The first Sunday
The first Monday
The first Tuesday
The first Wednesday
The first Thursday
The first Friday
The first Saturday
The first day
The first weekday
Which day?
Sunday
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
Report format:
Summary
Summary (text)
Abstract
Abstract (text)
PubMed
Send at most:
1 item
5 items
10 items
20 items
50 items
100 items
200 items
Send even when there aren't any new results
Number of items displayed:
5
10
15
20
50
100
Page navigation
Title & authors
Similar articles
Publication types
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Kara Douglas .
Aust Nurs Midwifery J .
2014 Feb .
Format
Abstract
PubMed
PMID
Kulig JC, Edge D, Smolenski S.
Kulig JC, et al.
Australas Emerg Nurs J. 2014 Aug;17(3):126-34. doi: 10.1016/j.aenj.2014.04.003. Epub 2014 Jun 2.
Australas Emerg Nurs J. 2014.
PMID: 25113315
Hanes PF.
Hanes PF.
Nurs Clin North Am. 2016 Dec;51(4):625-645. doi: 10.1016/j.cnur.2016.07.006.
Nurs Clin North Am. 2016.
PMID: 27863578
Review.
Hood S.
Hood S.
Aust Nurs J. 2006 Oct;14(4):32.
Aust Nurs J. 2006.
PMID: 17061357
No abstract available.
Lenehan G.
Lenehan G.
J Emerg Nurs. 2012 Jan;38(1):1-2. doi: 10.1016/j.jen.2011.12.003.
J Emerg Nurs. 2012.
PMID: 22226130
No abstract available.
Zarea K, Beiranvand S, Sheini-Jaberi P, Nikbakht-Nasrabadi A.
Zarea K, et al.
Australas Emerg Nurs J. 2014 Nov;17(4):190-6. doi: 10.1016/j.aenj.2014.05.006. Epub 2014 Oct 24.
Australas Emerg Nurs J. 2014.
PMID: 25440225
Review.
Format:
AMA
APA
MLA
NLM
Send To
Clipboard
Email
Save
My Bibliography
Collections
Citation Manager
[x]
NLM
NIH
HHS
USA.gov
An official website of the United States government
The .gov means it’s official.
Federal government websites often end in .gov or .mil. Before
sharing sensitive information, make sure you’re on a federal
government site.
The site is secure.
The https:// ensures that you are connecting to the
official website and that any information you provide is encrypted
and transmitted securely.
MeSH
PMC
Bookshelf
Disclaimer
Help
Accessibility
Careers
All Titles TV Episodes Celebs Companies Keywords Advanced Search
Fully supported English (United States) Partially supported Français (Canada) Français (France) Deutsch (Deutschland) हिंदी (भारत) Italiano (Italia) Português (Brasil) Español (España) Español (México)
In the tradition of old serials, and described as a classic Universal Frankenstein movie as if made by Russ Meyer, Dr. Psycho and his evil nurses kidnap local peasant virgins for their fiend... Read all In the tradition of old serials, and described as a classic Universal Frankenstein movie as if made by Russ Meyer, Dr. Psycho and his evil nurses kidnap local peasant virgins for their fiendish experiments, but Dr. Psycho has something anterior in mind for their blood... In the tradition of old serials, and described as a classic Universal Frankenstein movie as if made by Russ Meyer, Dr. Psycho and his evil nurses kidnap local peasant virgins for their fiendish experiments, but Dr. Psycho has something anterior in mind for their blood...
The film is a complete visual effects piece, produced using old style visual effects of forced perspective miniatures and rear projection, to create the huge laboratory.
Suggest an edit or add missing content
The Best Movies and Series to Watch in October
Fall TV: The Best New and Upcoming Series
It doesn’t matter if you work in a hospital, GP surgery, clinic, theatre or in the community; the hot weather affects us all.
Patients and healthcare staff are at an increased risk of dehydration and heat stress.
If you feel your work environment is too hot, you should speak to senior managers and estates department promptly.
Employers have a responsibility to ensure both patients and staff are safe – you should ask them to implement your local ‘Heatwave Policy’ and contingency planning procedures.
According to The Workplace (Health, Safety and Welfare) Act, there are no maximum temperatures, but employers must take “every possible step” to ensure their employees are safe and “comfortable”.
Here are a few tips to keep both you, as a nurse or healthcare professional, and your patients safe;
Don’t suffer in silence. Discuss any concerns you have with senior colleagues and managers. Hospitals, care homes and local authorities should have contingency plans and equipment in place for heatwaves.
Manslaughter charges dropped for 3 Florida nurses in Hurricane Irma overheating deaths
Manslaughter charges dropped for 3 Florida nurses in Hurricane Irma overheating deaths
Terry Spencer
| The Associated Press
Share your feedback to help improve our site!
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. – Prosecutors dropped manslaughter charges Thursday against three nurses who were present when 12 nursing home patients suffered fatal overheating five years ago after Hurricane Irma knocked out power to their facility's air conditioning.
The Broward County State Attorney's Office dismissed charges against Althia Meggie, Sergo Colin and Tamika Miller, but not Jorge Carballo, the home's administrator. He is still scheduled to go on trial next month, and prosecutors said Meggie, Colin and Miller would testify against him.
The victims, ranging in age from 57 to 99, had body temperatures of up to 108 degrees, paramedics have reported. The staff has been criticized for not taking the patients to a hospital across the street that had air conditioning.
Carballo's attorney, James Cobb, did not immediately return a call Thursday seeking comment. He sent a letter to Broward State Attorney Harold Pryor last week saying, "I've never seen a more malicious, misguided prosecution in my life."
He told Pryor that lead prosecutor Chris Killoran has admitted to him that Carballo will be acquitted. He said Pryor and Killoran have "no good faith reasonable belief that you can obtain a conviction of Mr. Carballo."
Pryor, in a Thursday letter, responded, "I am aware of the challenges ahead; however, we do believe we have a good faith basis to proceed against your client."
The deaths began at the Rehabilitation Center of Hollywood Hills three days after Irma knocked out a transformer that powered the cooling system at the 150-bed, two-story facility in suburban Fort Lauderdale. Otherwise, the facility never lost power.
A state report said that before the storm hit on Sept. 10, 2017, Carballo and his staff made appropriate preparations. They purchased extra food and water and seven days' fuel for the generator.
Administrators also participated in statewide conference calls with regulators, including one where then-Gov. Rick Scott said nursing homes should call his cellphone for help.
After the air conditioner was knocked out, Carballo and his facility manager contacted Florida Power & Light. When that didn't work, they tried calling Scott's cellphone and county and city officials. No help came.
Temperatures that week were in the upper 80s. On Sept. 12, two days after the storm, serious problems began to arise.
Employees tried to use portable air conditioners to keep the patients cool, but they were not properly installed. The units on the first floor were vented into the ceiling, meaning they were displacing heat into the second floor. That's where 11 of the 12 victims lived.
In an internet chatroom managers used to communicate, the director of housekeeping wrote, "the patients don't look good." The report says Carballo never responded but did order the installation of large fans.
In the early afternoon, Hollywood paramedics made the first of several visits over the next 16 hours: a 93-year-old man had breathing problems. A paramedic asked about the high temperatures — staff said they were getting the air conditioner repaired. Paramedics took the man to the hospital across the street, where doctors measured his temperature at 106 degrees. He died five days later.
Carballo told investigators that when he left at 11 p.m. the temperature inside the home was safe. The report found that "not credible."
At 3 a.m. on Sept. 13, paramedics returned to treat an elderly woman in cardiac arrest, with one telling investigators the home's temperature was "ungodly hot." The woman's temperature was 107 and so was another person's. The paramedics were called into a room where Colin, the lead nurse, was performing CPR on a dead man.
Paramedics told investigators the man had rigor mortis, meaning he had been dead for hours, undercutting the staff's contention they monitored patients closely. The report says security video shows no one visited the man for seven hours.
Paramedics said Colin tried to stop them from checking other patients, saying everything was OK. Lt. Amy Parrinello said she replied, "you told me that before and now we have multiple deceased patients so with all due respect, I don't trust your judgment."
At 6 a.m., fire Capt. Andrew Holtfreter arrived and was summoned to another dead body. A paramedic began treating a patient whose temperature was so high it couldn't be measured — the department's thermometers max out at 108 degrees.
Alarmed by the patients arriving at its emergency room, Memorial Hospital staff went across the street. One nurse said the home felt like "the blast of heat" inside a car that's been sitting in the sun all day.
The fire department ordered the home evacuated.
Soon, Hollywood homicide detectives arrived — about the time FPL came to fix the air conditioner.
Little Feet Porn
Hair Porn Comics
Free Porn Videos Creampie