I will not stand in your way as you show the world who you are and what you are able to do. Best of luck, and stay safe in these troubled times. |
| OP question makes no sense - how do you forcibly ventilate someone who is not intubated or trached? You looking to bring back iron lungs from polio days? What do you do with the saliva and emesis (vomit), let it roll into the lungs to cause further damage? How do you create a seal between the trachea and the vent? Have to intubate or trach somebody to put on a control type ventilator, only way to maintain airway when someone cannot breath themselves. And vents are not just ambu bags being pumped as shown in the $100 self made ones- have to determine and set cc’s of air to be pumped each breath, respiratory rate, assist or control settings, sigh frequency, pressure alarm levels, positive end expiratory pressure settings, O2 saturation ranges among other settings. Maybe let the med professionals handle critical care - this is far more complicated than home made solutions. |
Thank you. I needed this. |
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I’m not going to waste my time reading all 8 pages. The premise of this thread is madness.
There’s a difference between positive pressure breathing support and invasive ventilator support. They can control the percentage of supplied oxygen with both methods. Only the sickest people get put on ventilators, so of course they’re more likely to die. When their oxygen saturation drops too low while on positive pressure breathing support, they can be put on ventilators so they don’t die. This is basic shit. I’ve seen it play it out twice with loved ones. One had lung cancer and the other had pneumonia. The one with lung cancer declined invasive measures and died. The ventilator wouldn’t have offered him any quality time, or helped him heal from cancer. |
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OK. I will say without a doubt: Intibated people have really bad outcomes. But the outcome without intimation would be much worse.
I watched my father on a ventilator last year. Without the ventilator, his O2 saturation was under 85%. At it worst, on 100% O2, with the ventilator, it was 86%. They did an emergency procedure (on XMAS day) and he recovered. Took him a long time, and even today, 15 months later, he is not 100%. But without it, we would have had a funeral on Christmas Day (he would have died on the 23rd or 24th and we are jewish). Ventilator and intubation are a last resort. I can safely say, 100% of the people that need ventilators and do not get it will die. |
OP is all about Cargo Cult solutions to our most pressing problems. She flies like an eagle over mere obstacles while the “professionals” have to hack their way through reality’s jungle of facts. |
It's not all I take, but it's part of my cocktail. Thanks for your concern about my well-being, I'm sure. |
People on Reddit are quoting twiv by another NY doctor. |
Would suctioning help with intubation? |
Yes, people who are intubated often need a lot of suctioning. |
Nothing about her question was meaningful nor can we have a meaningful chat about it unless surgeons here step in to talk about it. |
hear, hear! |
Correct--they're suctioned. So it's not like they're forced onto a ventilator and left alone. It takes a LOT of management and monitoring. It's not plug and play. |
Do you hear yourself? No sense whatsoever. |