The dose, route and timing of administration will all play key roles in the effectiveness of the drug. This is discussed in greater detail in Chapter 5.
Episode of care
You are treating 94‐year‐old Nelida, who has fallen in her residential aged care facility while going to the bathroom. She has a large bruise on the side of her head (temporal region) and a shortened and rotated left leg, as well as a deep laceration to her left upper thigh caused by the shard of a mirror that broke during the fall. Staff report that the patient has dementia but can still converse appropriately most days. The patient is in extreme pain but her heart rate is not elevated. You realise this is probably due to her being on a beta‐blocker for hypertension. You administer intranasal fentanyl repeatedly en route to hospital to treat her pain. On arrival, her level of consciousness has decreased. Reflecting on what might have caused this, you consider that the combination of blood loss and a blunted compensatory response due to the beta‐blockers, along with a reduced renal capacity due to her age, and the fact that the repeated fentanyl doses have not been cleared as rapidly as expected has resulted in an accumulation of medication, leading to adverse effects.
While this is not a contraindication of fentanyl, it is important to remember that older patients often clear medications much more slowly than younger patients, and dosing may need to be adjusted to account for this, to avoid adverse effects.
Skills in practice
Medications can come in varying concentrations and formulations for different modes of delivery. Adrenaline is a naturally occurring catecholamine hormone produced by the adrenal glands and is often also administered in the management of life‐threatening presentations such as cardiac arrest, anaphylaxis and croup.
The concentration of adrenaline can be expressed as 1:1000 or 1:10 000. This is expressed verbally as ‘one in one thousand’ and ‘one in ten thousand’ respectively. This ratio refers to the medication mass per volume of solution:
Adrenaline concentrations can and do vary, but the following is a guide to concentrations and routes of administration for various indications:
Concentration | Route of administration | Indication |
---|---|---|
Adrenaline 1:1000 | Intramuscular Nebulised | Anaphylaxis Croup Asthma |
Adrenaline 1:10 000 | Intravenous | Cardiac arrest Cardiogenic shock |
Administering medication to children
Historically, children were considered small adults, with the same physiology and metabolic requirements as an adult, but on a smaller scale. This is now known not to be the case, but many medications are still not tested on children, so safe doses in this patient group are not established empirically. A basic understanding of the differences between adult and child anatomy and physiology will ensure safer administration of medication to children. For example, the child’s heart does not have the same capacity to raise cardiac output by increasing its force of contraction and relies on increasing the heart rate to compensate for increased demand. As a result, peripheral vasoconstriction usually occurs more readily, in order to maintain blood pressure.
Medications which cause peripheral vasoconstriction need to be used with extra caution in children because of this. Adrenaline will cause peripheral vasoconstriction when used to treat anaphylaxis or asthma, and the beta‐2 agonist salbutamol (albuterol) is also often contraindicated in children because of the possibility of tachycardia. Using medications that cause tachycardia will place further demands on a child’s heart, possibly at a time when it is already working hard to compensate. These medications have to be dosed and administered with extreme care in children, and some may be contraindicated.
Reflection
How is dosing calculated for children? If you don’t know the weight of the patient and there is no one to give you the weight, how would you estimate it, to ensure you give a safe and effective dose?
What special considerations need to be borne in mind when giving medications intranasally to children?
When administering medications to a child, ensure consent is gained from the parent, caregiver or a response given by the child is appropriate for their age and presentation. Ensure your approach to treating a child extends to providing oversight to the parent/caregiver as well.
Conclusion
The out‐of‐hospital setting is not the same as the controlled environment of the hospital and the unpredictable and uncontrolled nature of paramedicine requires that the practising paramedic performs the work that would be done by three different health professionals in a hospital. This places a great responsibility on the paramedic when it comes to the safe and effective use of medicines. The paramedic must be an expert in both the correct choice and administration of medications. In addition, because the environment in which the paramedic is operating is particularly conducive to making errors, the paramedic must also be constantly vigilant and ensure the stringent and consistent checking of medication route, dose, time, expiration date and patient. As the scope of paramedic practice increases and more medications are administered in the prehospital setting, the need for paramedics to have a mastery of medicines becomes even greater.
Glossary
Agonist A drug that binds to a receptor and produces the same response as the endogenous substance. For example, morphine is an agonist at opioid receptors because it produces the same response as the endorphins produce.Antagonist A drug that binds to a receptor and prevents the endogenous substance or an agonist from binding and having its effect. Also known as a blocker, because it blocks the activation of the receptor.Contraindication A characteristic or condition which would prevent a patient from being able to receive a certain medication.First‐pass metabolism The metabolism of a large proportion of an administered dose of a drug by the liver almost immediately after absorption.Indication A condition or symptom which a medication is approved to treat.Pharmacodynamics The actions of a drug on the body.Pharmacokinetics The actions of the body on the drug.Receptor The site at which