CPT, ACLS…assessing cognition
………
These two videos were made while in OT school, when we learned them during lab. Now I’ll be doing it on real people!!!
Yes, I know there are some mistakes in both videos…we were students just trying to get SOMETHING out there.
Pointing out errors to be helpful is great. If you want to be critical though, just make your own, better, video, so we can benefit from your awesomeness, okay?
ANYWAY! I’m going to watch these videos to refresh my memory, then go to bed,and hope tomorrow is a little less overwhelming!!
First day of final fieldwork, overrrrrrrrr
Today was my first day of my geriatric mental health fieldwork.
I met up with my supervisor around 8amish, read student manual binders for about an hour and a half until I was utterly overwhelmed, then joined a psychologist while he went and did a group in the inpatient ward that deals with stress disorders. It was an initial group and it was interesting. One lady there was complaining about how she couldn't have her makeup – she had the good point that they kept saying you should do things to make yourself feel better, but makeup would make her feel better! LOL! You aren't even allowed conditioner or face soap or anything. You get a baby Johnson's shampoo and Dial soup. Wow. Anyways, all these people were pretty high-functioning overall…able to interact, crack jokes, use words like “acrimonious”,…lol.
Even though this group was basically an initial hi, don't stop making your meds after you leave, kinda group, they all clamored to tell their stories, although sometimes indirectly, like…”What do you think it does when your mother tells you, when you're still a child, that she was molested?” Etc. They all mostly had problems with depression, anxiety, a few bipolars, a few DID (dissociative identity disorder)…honestly, considering my own background with depression/anxiety/panic attacks, and their high levels of function overall, it was a little hard for me to be present. I could see how precarious the slope is, to ending up inpatient. The psychologist kept discussing serotonin, which I wear around my neck (www.madewithmolecules.com), and I could feel it practically burning into my skin!
My OT supervisor also showed me the gero inpatient ward I'd be in – although sometimes if another ward has a low census, they temporarily combine them or something, so there were lots of young people there…including one lady who looked like an Amy Winehouse, screaming and cursing and trying to get out…my OT was just showing me around cool as a cucumber as this lady ranted and raved in the halls, not more than a few feet from us. She oddly seemed to ignore us. When it was time to leave the locked ward, the supervisor had me slip through quickly, since this lady was trying to leave. “I need to leave. I need to go to a hospital that will actually help me.”
Those were my two forays into the inpatient psych areas…the rest of the day was a combination of reading through mind-numbing huge manuals, and getting to see a few outpatient treatments with my OT, specifically a few that used assessments I'd be using – I got to see the Cognitive Performance Task – CPT – done, as well as the MMSE. The man on the MMSE scored in the moderate dementia range, answering with confidence that it was 2008, that it was Fall, etc (while also knowing it was January 5th).
For the lady who she did the CPT on – she did quite well. She scored slightly lower on the “shop” task because she “bought” a belt before checking the wallet to see how much money she had. The “phone” task was interesting as she really had to call a store and ask about a gallon of paint, which is a little flustering. I was thinking they'd have to be careful on this one not to let the patient call a big hardware chain that would make you navigate a menu to get to a person. They do account for that in the test though. Pretty interesting. The lady would think out loud, and for example on the medication task, she'd be like “Hmm…this says take as needed…normally at home I don't put those in the boxes if it says that, but I guess I could put one in a day…what do you think?” Therapist, noncomitally: “Whatever you think is best.”. Luckily she always self-corrected her mistakes, but it was a little slow-going. The only sub-task she really did poorly on was the “travel” one, following a very basic map.
There was/is a little confusion over orientation – I did get my ID badge today at least. And I was shown around some. My OT seems interesting and nice and so do her PT/ST colleagues. Here's the big scary issue. THE HOSPITAL IS A GHOST TOWN! They're closing down wings, laying off therapists and support staff, left and right. Maybe I misunderstood, but my OT was saying they had like THIRTY OTs a few years ago, and now it's down to four OTs. Today I saw one PT, one PTA, and one ST, and then just my OT. Maybe she meant, actually, that there were like 30 therapists total, and only 4 now…hence the four therapists I met today. I'll ask for clarification. Regardless, there is no receptionist, and there are all these massive rooms/wings that are filled with AWESOME rehab equpiment, that are just dead/quiet. We stopped through the Independent Village that they boast about on their website, that has like a fake little grocery store, gas station, fake ATM, etc…it is SO COOL, it is like every OT's DREAM for functional, occupation-based treatment…and it's DEAD. Dead because it's isolated now (it was attached to the rehab area which is defunct), and it would be unsafe for a single therapist to take a patient to an isolated area, far away from any help. Seriously, a little chilling, to walk into these rooms strewn with rehab equipment. And this little village BROKE MY HEART. Such a beautiful, perfect, stunning, amazing, coolest thing I've ever seen. And yet empty. What this also means is that my OT has a lot on her plate – she runs the neuro day patient program, AND she has to do support staff functions that normally a receptionist/admin person would handle, and she is the only therapist I know of so far….today I ate lunch alone because they had a meeting through lunchtime. Not a big deal, just very different from my last two rotations. I think I'm going to have to be creative about my learning since it looks like basically I'll get to watch my OT do things a few times, then I'll be on my own from then on out…of course getting in my necessary supervisory hours, etc, but I won't be working side-by-side with any therapists.
They use the Allen's Level stuff a LOT – some of the RTI, ADM crafts, and then the CPT. Also the MMSE and ACLS. So this will be a great learning experience! I feel confident I can administer the MMSE, and the CPT is relatively straight forward once you learn some of the nuances with lower functioning patients. The ADM crafts and ACLS (leather lacing) are going to be hard for me because I have such major issues with visual perception and therefore struggle mightily to do these types of tasks.
Okay…this is my longest post in a long time. Basically, I'm feeling somewhat scared and overwhelmed, but I think that's normal for the first day/week of a fieldwork, and I think I can handle it, I just need to keep a lid on my panic!! Hey, if I do go postal, I'll be in the right place, lol.
I've gotten some sweet blog comments lately – thank you.
Last fieldwork starts tomorrow…
Tomorrow is my first day of my final fieldwork. Geriatric mental health. I'm scared. Of course. But I think it will all be okay. I need to refresh my memory on ACLS, CPT, and MMSE, and start planning Life skills groups. Of course by the end of this week I'll have a much better idea of what exactly to prepare. I've prepped my clothes, my lunch, etc for tomorrow, plus organized paperwork, so hopefully everything will go smoothly tomorrow. The CPR card may be a big deal, we shall see.
Okay, I'm going to try and go to bed soon. Wish me luck on my first day. And I seriously seriously seriously seriously am getting my act together so I think I'll FINALLY catch up on emails, Facebook, blog entries, questions, etc, SOON!!!!!
ACLS video with Spanish captions!
So I have to do the ACLS at my upcoming rotation and I was looking at the google video and I stumbled across this thread, and thus discovered my ACLS youtube video (starring classmates Kerri and Allison), has been captioned in Spanish! Ha ha! Cool!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9IzjK6WJiKo
http://www.ot-advantage.com/ota/blogs.aspx?id=988&blogid=96
Dueling poems of fieldwork supervisor/student
Juliet, my last beloved supervisor, came in to the office from seeing a patient one day, to tell me about this funny lady she had just seen. This lady had recited a poem to her (her own, of course) and then insisted Juliet take a copy. It was a religious poem about the days getting worse because God told us so (apocalyptic-style, yo). ANYWAY, we were discussing it and the end result was that I begged Juliet to write me a poem…even if it was just a sentence or two. So in my last week, she came in with this beautiful gem…any mistakes are mine in re-typing it up, since Juliet is the queen of grammar. All of it is relevant, believe it or not, lol. I was impressed. I MISS MY JULIET!!!!!!!!!!
“A Poem for Karen
Three months went by so fast…
Hard to believe so much time has passed!
Karen’s leaving us, it’s such a pity.
At least she still has Lester the Lion Kitty.
I’ve never met him, but I know he’s famous.
He’s on YouTube, where his name is
Well-known to all who read her Blog!
(some say Karen should have bought a dog)
So it’s Goodbye to our dear student
(When in Nashville, please be prudent!)
And remember your friends at “Hospital”
(X, Y, Juliet and was there a fourth…?
Have a great Christmas back in La Jolla
And think of Juliet when you see a sequoia.”
Here was my poetic response:
“A Poem for Juliet
You are not
the only one who can
write a poem.
But I cannot rhyme
Thyme; lime; chyme;
Creativity flows out as rhymes
flow in
So instead I cheat
Using little sentences
like this.
To make it look
as if I am
rather poetic.
I wanted you to know
that you are like
a sequoia.
Not morbidly woodenly obese
Or exceptionally tall
But you have a majestic presence
Powerful and graceful
An experience that cannot be forgotten.”
:O
I've been in Nashville, preparing for my final rotation. Today my friends drove me to the location – not too bad of a commute. I couldn't figure out which building on the campus I need to be at on Monday morning though! Guess I'll get there early.
I'm actually a little “off” in entirety regarding this fieldwork. I didn't contact them until rather late and there's an issue with the CPR card (which was stolen since it was in my wallet when my car got broken into in late October) – I'm getting a replacement card but it won't be there by Monday, that's for sure. This fieldwork site is going to be like YOU SUCK and I'm going to break down and be like I'm sorry! I'm sorry!
Ok just kidding. Kind of. That reminds me, I need to print out my online orientation test. And like, take it first. LOL. Guess I'll do that now.
I joined the Curves gym here and I'm working on getting healthier…hmmm. Have been sleeping a lot, healing from my sinus infection…so don't have a lot of fascinating stories to tell…of course I could tell my old stories and I will, but not yet, because um, I still don't feel much like it.
By the way, my high maintenance low-level obese patient that I did a lot of co-treats with PT, who would rarely even open her eyes even though she was fairly young (but had terminal illness)…I found her in the obituaries. (We had discharged her because she wasn't wanting to do anything anymore…can't really blame her.) Ouch.
happy new year's!!
still sick. on antibiotics now at least.augh.lol.
have a great new year everyone. my goals for the next 3 months include doing a good job on rotation, doing my professional development evaluation, studying for the boards, and going to the gym at least 4x a week and eating healthier!!!!!!!!!! Oh yeah, and figuring out where to live and work. No biggie. AHAHAHAHAHAA