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Vital Signs  Vital Signs are measurements reflecting the patient’s physical well-being and condition.  Vital Signs include the following:  Pulse  Respiration  Blood pressure  Temperature  Upon admission  When ordered by MD or outlined in plan of care  Any time there is a change in the patient’s condition or c/o pain  Patient falls or incident occurs  Monitoring the patient’s response to a new medication  At check up or physical examination  Caffeine  Medications  Emotions  Exercise  Age Temperature  Body temperature is the measurement of the amount of heat in the body  Measured  Normal in Fahrenheit or Celsius body temperature is 98.6ºF or 37ºC  Variations in temperature are caused by individual differences, time of day, part of body Four Ways to Take Temperature  Glass thermometer  Battery-operated  Other electronic thermometer electronic thermometers (ear, forehead)  Chemically treated plastic/paper thermometer Oral Temperature (O)  Measured in the mouth  Most common, comfortable and convenient method  May be inaccurate if the patient has had anything to eat or drink Axillary Temperature (A)  Temperature measured under the armpit  Less accurate reading because measures external temperature  Record an A by the reading Rectal Temperature  Measured in the rectum  Most accurate because it is an internal temperature  Use red rectal thermometer  Record R by reading  Pulse is the rhythmic expansion and contraction of the arteries caused by the beating of the heart; the expansion and contraction show how fast, how regular, and with what force the heart is beating.  Before birth/birth  4 weeks to 1 year  Childhood years  Adult years 120-160 80-160 80-115 60-100  Rate: the number of pulse beats per minute  Rhythm: used to describe the regularity of the pulse beats  Force: strength or power; used to describe the beat of the pulse  Bradycardia: heart rate below 60  Tachycardia: heart rate over 100  Carotid  Apical  Brachial  Radial  Femoral  Popliteal  Dorsalis pedis/posterior tibial  Pulse at the wrist  Patient’s arm should be well supported and resting comfortably.  Find the pulse by placing the tips of your first three fingers on the palm side of the patient’s wrist in a line with the thumb, next to wrist bone.  If you press too hard, you will stop the flow of blood and not feel the pulse.  Never use your thumb  Note the rhythm and force  Look at the position of the second hand on your watch. Start counting the pulse beats that you feel until the second hand comes back to the same number on the clock.  Apical pulse is a measurement of the heartbeats at the apex of the heart, located just under the left breast.  Uncover the patient’s chest  Place the diaphragm of the stethoscope under the left breast. Listen for the heart sounds.  Count the heart sounds for a full minute.  Report to immediate supervisor the following:  The pulse rate  If the pulse was regular or not  Report anything unusual.  The difference between the apical and radial pulse  The heart is contracting but the pulse is not reaching the extremities. (A-Fib)  Best obtained by having 2 people count the radial and apical pulses at the same time.