- Joined
- Oct 24, 2022
- Messages
- 2,974
- Reaction score
- 9,357
Primary cardiac arrests - where you would see the heart stop or go into a non-functional rhythm - almost never happen in the NICU. If they have evidence that the heart was the first thing, as might happen with an embolus, that would be very indicative of embolism. 99% of codes in a NICU are respiratory based - meaning their sats go down, then their heart slows/stops. If we reestablish adequate ventilation, they recover quickly. For a baby to have adequate sats and be bradying, I would be worried about pericardiac effusion/pneumopericardium or tension pneumothorax, along with the "normals" of electrolyte imbalances.
I would not anticipate overfeeding of milk to cause purple distension, especially in that short of a time period.
As well it should. Jurors have rules they have to adhere to, and if they searched information, whether they found it or not, it would be a violation of the rules.
Thankfully, in the NICU we're spared that. That is more of an issue with the older children and adults. NICU doesn't care about money - medicaid covers a lot of the NICU babies here. There are a few laws that allow us to never turn anyone away for ability to pay as well. We don't have the social safety nets though to help them on discharge.
I really wouldn’t have a clue when it comes to the med evidence but the testimony suggests to me that the baby collapsed without prior warning. The designated nurse was in the same room but the baby seemed to just collapse without a single sign beforehand.