I witnessed someone place the lower limb leads on the belly. I am fairly new to healthcare barley coming up on a year. I was told it’s okay but I didn’t feel right about it and said so. Am I wrong? Is it okay to leave the lower limb leads on the belly?
That’s called a modified EKG/ECG. It’s totally fine. You place the electrodes in line with legs below the belly button line. It’s used when the patient has injured legs or even missing the lower limbs.
Thanks, but leads are not the same as electrodes nor are they the same as wire leads. You kept using those terms interchangeably and that could confuse someone.
10:48 - i hope you meant 10/100/1000-BASE-T Ethernet; it would be funny to see a hospital with a PBX connected to a PPP Modem Pool internally that reconverts to LAN for the EKG and raacks of PT Info Servers with dual PIII Xeon chips with a whopping 128MB of SD RAM, running obsolete unsupported W2K3 Server!
Health care workers are the greediest after lawyers, MONEY MONEY MONEY! I had EKG done 3 weeks ago, what I saw on my benefit summary from insurance was an exuberant of money $ 913.
To be fair, healthcare workers are not the ones who chose the price for any tests or treatments. Additionally, if a test or treatment is ordered, it's because it is of the expert opinion of healthcare professionals, and deemed medically necessary. If it is exorbitantly priced, its because the hospital or healthcare system is greedy, not the healthcare professional.
@9:43. I think you're confused by the comment she made. The money that is made from these tests ordered do not literally go in our pockets. Healthcare workers are just doing their job. Don't blame them. If you have an issue with what you were charged and do not have insurance, apply for charity care. The healthcare workers are just carrying out their duties.
I like that you included the machine inputs.
That was so nice and clear. Thank you dear!
Just what I wanted! Thank you. Amazing teachings.
Thank you for the explanation, you explained it better than my professor
Thank you!!! I really appreciate your videos!
Thank you!!! This needs more views
Well explained. thanks luv
Very helpful 🎉
Thaaank you for using a female model
I witnessed someone place the lower limb leads on the belly. I am fairly new to healthcare barley coming up on a year. I was told it’s okay but I didn’t feel right about it and said so. Am I wrong? Is it okay to leave the lower limb leads on the belly?
That’s called a modified EKG/ECG. It’s totally fine. You place the electrodes in line with legs below the belly button line. It’s used when the patient has injured legs or even missing the lower limbs.
Amazing explanation but the camera person needs practice. Thank you
The verbage is great but I can’t see the patient and the locations you’re using so I can be sufficient. Otherwise great video.
Thanks, but leads are not the same as electrodes nor are they the same as wire leads. You kept using those terms interchangeably and that could confuse someone.
10:48 - i hope you meant 10/100/1000-BASE-T Ethernet; it would be funny to see a hospital with a PBX connected to a PPP Modem Pool internally that reconverts to LAN for the EKG and raacks of PT Info Servers with dual PIII Xeon chips with a whopping 128MB of SD RAM, running obsolete unsupported W2K3 Server!
Depends
Health care workers are the greediest after lawyers, MONEY MONEY MONEY! I had EKG done 3 weeks ago, what I saw on my benefit summary from insurance was an exuberant of money $ 913.
To be fair, healthcare workers are not the ones who chose the price for any tests or treatments. Additionally, if a test or treatment is ordered, it's because it is of the expert opinion of healthcare professionals, and deemed medically necessary. If it is exorbitantly priced, its because the hospital or healthcare system is greedy, not the healthcare professional.
@9:43. I think you're confused by the comment she made.
The money that is made from these tests ordered do not literally go in our pockets.
Healthcare workers are just doing their job. Don't blame them.
If you have an issue with what you were charged and do not have insurance, apply for charity care. The healthcare workers are just carrying out their duties.