Follow Slashdot blog updates by subscribing to our blog RSS feed

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror

Comment Re:ER Doc Here (Score 3, Informative) 126

If you have poor profusion in the place where you are measuring, it can definitely cause poor pulse-ox reading. When you are looking at a pulse-ox in a hospital setting, you can see something called the pleth wave that shows the stregnth of the pulse in the measures area. If you have a weak pleth, we know the O2 reading is off and we need to move it to another area.

Comment Re:ER Doc Here (Score 3, Informative) 126

Great question. When you intubate a patient, the tube that goes into the trachea has a balloon that inflates, which prevents air leak and creates a closed system. So the volume that the vent delivers is the volume that the lung gets. An individual taking a deep breath usually has a lung capacity of about 12ml/kg of ideal body weight. Prior to year 2000, that was the typical goal of adults on a vent. The vent does measure both volume and required pressure and getting to that volume took a peak pressure of about 50mmHg. In 2000 the ARDSNet trial showed that using much smaller volumes (about 6ml/kg) allowed for lower pressures (around 25 mmHG) and caused much less lung damage. To make up for the lower respiratory volumes, the respiratory rate in increased so that the total volume/min stays the same. Bi-pap, by comparison, is much less precise. There is a lot of leak around the mask, a lot of the volume you are delivering goes into the “dead-space” of the mouth and nasopharynx, and the delivery pressure at the mouth is often very different from what the lung sees. That being said, most of the time we try to use bi-pap first, since intubation required deep sedation, and can lead to a lot of other complications

Comment ER Doc Here (Score 5, Informative) 126

Initially, we were being told to intubate early and avoid non-invasive ventilation like CPAP and BIPAP because it increased aerosolization of the virus, and because the volume of air pushed into the lung could be more precisely controlled, attempting to prevent lung damage. By late March, many of us in the EM community were pushing back on guidance asking us to intubate hypoxic but otherwise healthy looking patients. In the interim, folks figured out ways to rig a viral filter on to the outflow of a bibap mask, decreasing the hospitals concerns about letting us use non-invasive.

Submission + - Imminent server seizure tests Brazil's new internet bill of rights (sarava.org) 1

sunbird writes: Less than one week after passing the Marco Civil da Internet, Article 3 of which purports to protect free expression and privacy of personal data from government intrusion, a Public Prosecutor in Brazil is seeking to seize a server hosting research groups, social movements, discussion lists and other tools. The server is hosted by the Saravá Group, which has adopted a policy of not storing connection logs to protect the privacy of users. The Public Prosecutor is seeking to identify individuals involved in Rádio Mudo, a project hosted by Saravá, but as Saravá does not store logs, there is no information on the server that is responsive to the investigation. This action comes as Brazil seeks to place itself in the forefront of protecting internet privacy after it hosted the Net Mundial conference. Saravá has called for a protest action today at 1PM local time (9AM PT/12noonET) to protest against the seizure.

Submission + - Snowden joins Daniel Ellsberg on board of Freedom of the Press Foundation (pressfreedomfoundation.org)

sunbird writes: Edward Snowden is joining the board of the Freedom of the Press Foundation, a nonprofit committed to defending public-interest journalism which exposes law-breaking in government. The foundation is presently raising money and awareness for a variety of open-source encryption tools. Please consider donating to my favorite: the LEAP Encryption Access Project.
Electronic Frontier Foundation

Submission + - EFF challenges National Security Letter (eff.org)

sunbird writes: "The Electronic Frontier Foundation filed a lawsuit in the United States District Court in San Francisco on behalf of an anonymous petitioner seeking to challenge a National Security Letter (NSL) the petitioner had received. NSLs are issued by law enforcement with neither judicial oversight nor probable cause, and have been discussed on Slashdot before. In response to the lawsuit, the U.S. Department of Justice filed a separate lawsuit against the individual who had received the NSL, requesting that the court order the receipient to comply with the NSL and asking the court to find that the "failure to comply with a lawfully issued National Security Letter interferes with the United States' vindication of its sovereign interests in law enforcement, counterintelligence, and protecting national security." Both cases are filed under seal, but heavily-redacted filings are available. The cases remain pending."
Your Rights Online

Submission + - FBI caught on camera returning seized server (mayfirst.org)

sunbird writes: "As previously covered on Slashdot, on April 18th the FBI seized a server located in a New York colocation facility shared by May First / People Link and Riseup.net. The server, which was operated by the European Counter Network ("ECN"), the oldest independent internet service provider in Europe, was seized in relation to bomb threats sent to the University of Pittsburgh using a Mixmaster anonymous remailer hosted on the server (search warrant). The FBI's action has been criticized by the EFF. Predictably, the threats continued even after the server seizure. On April 24th, the FBI quietly returned the server, without notifying either Mayfirst / People Link or riseup, and were caught on video doing it."

Submission + - FBI seizes server providing anonymous remailer (riseup.net)

sunbird writes: At 16:00 ET on April 18, federal agents seized a server located in a New York colocation facility shared by May First / People Link and Riseup.net. The server was operated by the European Counter Network ("ECN"), the oldest independent internet service provider in Europe. The server was seized as a part of the investigation into bomb threats sent via the Mixmaster anonymous remailer received by the University of Pittsburgh that were previously discussed on Slashdot. As a result of the seizure, hundreds of unrelated people and organizations have been disrupted.
Electronic Frontier Foundation

Submission + - Warrantless wiretaping decisions issued by Ninth C (eff.org)

sunbird writes: "The Ninth Circuit yesterday issued two decisions in the Electronic Frontier Foundation's lawsuits against the National Security Agency (Jewel v. NSA) and the telecommunications companies (Hepting v. AT&T). EFF had argued in Hepting that the retroactive immunity passed by Congress was unconstitutional. The Ninth Circuit decision (.pdf) upholds the immunity and the district court's dismissal of the case. Short of an appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court, this effectively ends the suit against the telecoms. In much better news, the same panel issued a decision (.pdf) reversing the dismissal of the lawsuit against the N.S.A. and remanded the case back to the lower court for more proceedings. These cases have been previously discussed here ."

Slashdot Top Deals

How can you do 'New Math' problems with an 'Old Math' mind? -- Charles Schulz

Working...