Before you administer a vaccine you need to imms&vacs, anaphylaxis, life support training. Also have knowledge of the persons medical history, legalities around consent. You need to be knowledgeable about the vaccine in order to explain and gain consent. What could go wrong?
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Als antwoord op @No1_Warrior @KevinPascoe
I imagine groups of volunteers will administer the vaccine under the supervision of a healthcare professional that is trained in all of those matters. Maximum number of doses administered with the minimum number of medical staff. It makes complete sense.
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Als antwoord op @VolumeRose @KevinPascoe
And as a trained healthcare professional you are accountable for that which you delegate. It’s your responsibility to ensure the person is competent in all the above. I’ve left nursing but no way would I want this responsibility if I were still nursing.
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Als antwoord op @No1_Warrior @KevinPascoe
Why would the volunteer need to be competent in all of the above when they are specifically only there to administer the injection. The other matters could be handled separately. When I went for my flu jab this year I literally pulled my sleeve up and got poked, it took 2 secs.
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Als antwoord op @VolumeRose @KevinPascoe
I mean why even have nurses, Drs if anyone can undertake any procedure. 3 years to train to be a nurse. What do you think training is about? You can cause damage by administering an injection. There’s so much more to it than just jabbing someone.
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Als antwoord op @No1_Warrior @KevinPascoe
Well, the volunteers would be trained in how to do it properly.
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Als antwoord op @VolumeRose @KevinPascoe
A few things nurses learn about in training https://www.nursingtimes.net/clinical-archive/assessment-skills/injection-technique-1-administering-drugs-via-the-intramuscular-route-23-07-2018/ … https://www.nursingtimes.net/clinical-archive/dermatology/skin-1-the-structure-and-functions-of-the-skin-25-11-2019/ … https://www.nursingtimes.net/clinical-archive/orthopaedics/skeletal-system-2-structure-and-function-of-the-musculoskeletal-system-24-02-2020/ … https://www.nursingtimes.net/clinical-archive/immunology/anaphylaxis-in-adults-01-10-2002/ … https://www.nursingtimes.net/roles/nurse-educators/informed-consent-1-legal-basis-and-implications-for-practice-21-05-2018/ …
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Als antwoord op @No1_Warrior @KevinPascoe
Nurses are still a vital part of the process, but trained and supervised volunteers could greatly increase the amount of vaccines administered. One nurse supervising 5 volunteers could vaccinate 5 times the amount of patients. Is there a problem with training people up?
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Als antwoord op @VolumeRose @KevinPascoe
You are failing to understand all the learning that needs to take place before you can administer a vaccine. Every procedure involves, theory, practice, competency and assessment. If you’re ok with Sheila from payroll injecting you then crack on! I’d imagine most people are not.
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You are wasting your time - look at her timeline. I’ve blocked
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