@@nursingeducation3952 Gosh I wish they taught us this stuff at med school. They just throw us into the hospitals and expect us to know/learn on the job. Thanks again!
The suction is probably too high. The liner would collapse if the suction is too strong and there isn’t enough to suck, so it creates a vacuum, but since the liner isn’t super rigid, it collapses in on itself.
as a nursing student, this video is extremely helpful! thank you sooo much!!!
Glad you found it useful!
As a new nurse this was also helpful lol
Damn..... easy and straight to the point 👍this should have more views.
As a junior doctor, this was also very useful for me to understand!
Thanks! ignore the name of the channel. Everything here is for anyone that can use this information. I'm glad you found it helpful
@@nursingeducation3952 Gosh I wish they taught us this stuff at med school. They just throw us into the hospitals and expect us to know/learn on the job. Thanks again!
VERY easy steps that I needed as a visual learner ❤ THANK YOU
Thank you so much!! This video was extremely helpful!!
Thank you. I’m glad you found it helpful
you adjust the strength of suction after connecting it to the patient first right?
Thank you so much for this video. Very helpful.
You’re welcome. I’m glad you found it useful.
Thank you for sharing this video.
Why is my liner collapsing when suctioning on a home unit?
The suction is probably too high. The liner would collapse if the suction is too strong and there isn’t enough to suck, so it creates a vacuum, but since the liner isn’t super rigid, it collapses in on itself.
@@nursingeducation3952 ahh yes I should have lowered it. Thank you