DOCTOR INFORMATION

Measuring Vital Signs (OSCE)


Introduction 

  1. Greet patient and introduce yourself 
  2. Confirm patient details get patient consent βœ 
  3. Wash hands βœ‹ 
  4. Check patient is not in any pain 

 

Equipment 

 Stopwatch β± 

 Thermometer πŸŒ‘

 NEWS2 chart 

 Pulse oximeter 

 Blood pressure monitor 

 

What is NEWS2? 

 Used to identify the risk of deterioration in adult patients β¬‡ 


Consists of 6 factors: 

 Heart rate 

 Respiration rate 

 Oxygen saturation  

 Systolic blood pressure 

 Consciousness  

 Temperature πŸŒ‘

 

Assess Heart Rate 

  1. Palpate radial pulse πŸ’“
  2. Assess rate and rhythm of radial pulse πŸ’“
  3. Calculate heart rate from this: 
  4. Measure radial pulse for 60 seconds (do this when rhythm is irregular) β± 
  5. Measure radial pulse for 30 seconds and multiply by 2, or 15 multiplied by 4 β± 

 

Normal vs abnormal heart rates: 

 Normal: 60 to 100 bpm πŸ’“

 Bradycardia: <60 bpm πŸ’“

 Tachycardia: >100 bpm πŸ’“

 Atrial fibrillation: irregular rhythm  

 

Assess Respiratory rate 

  1. Assess respiratory rate as you simultaneously palpate radial pulse πŸ’“
  2. Identify differences between inspiration and expiration (e.g. prolonged expiration can indicate asthma or COPD) 
  3. Assess for 30 seconds and multiply by 2 to measure the breaths per minute β± 

 

Abnormal respiratory rate: 

 Normal: 12-20 breaths per minute 

 Bradypnoea: <12 breaths per minute  

 Tachypnoea: >20 breaths per minute  

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Oxygen Saturation (SpO2) 

  1. Switch on appropriately sized pulse oximeter/ remove nail varnish covering fingernail 
  2. Put the pulse oximeter of the patient’s fingernail 
  3. Record the oxygen saturation reading on the pulse spirometer 

 

Target oxygen saturation: 

 Scale 1: β‰₯96% 

 Scale 2: 88 to 92% (used for patients at risk of hypercapnic respiratory failure) 

 

Blood pressure 

 



Blood pressure cuff: 

  1. Select an appropriately sized blood pressure cuff 
  2. Wrap the cuff around patient’s arm, with the marker in line with brachial artery 

 

Manual measurement: 

  1. Palpate radial pulse πŸ’“
  2. Inflate cuff until you cannot feel the radial pulse πŸ’“
  3. Record the estimate of systolic blood pressure on the sphygmomanometer 

 

Accurate measurement: 

  1. Position diaphragm of stethoscope over brachial artery 
  2. Reinflate the cuff between 20 and 30 mmHg above the previously estimated systolic blood pressure β¬† 
  3. Slowly deflate cuff (2 to 3 mmHg per second) β¬‡ 
  4. Listen from the 1st Korotokoff sound, a thumping pulse πŸ’“
  5. Record the pressure at this point, this gives you the systolic blood pressure 
  6. Continue deflating the cuff until the sounds stop 
  7. Record the pressure at the last sound, the 5th Korotokoff sound, this gives you the diastolic blood pressure 
  8. Repeat on the opposite arm, after 2 minutes to confirm accuracy if the patient is hyper- or hypo-tensive 

 

Consciousness 

 

Use the ACVPU scale to establish the level of consciousness of the patient: 

 Alert: fully alert patient, spontaneously opens eyes πŸ‘

 Confused: alert but confused patient β“ 

 Voices: patient responds to sound πŸ‘‚

 Pain: patient responds to pain 

 Unresponsive: patient does not respond to sound or pain βŒ 

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Temperature 

  1. Switch on a clean tympanic thermometer πŸŒ‘
  2. Apply a disposable cover to the probe end 
  3. Place probe in ear canal πŸ‘‚
  4. Insert the probe further inwards until it seals the ear canal πŸ‘‚
  5. Make a note of the tympanic temperature πŸŒ‘
  6. Remove the probe and dispose of the cover 

 

NEWS2 

  1. Record the 6 measurements you have made on a NEWS2 chart βœ 
  2. Calculate the NEWS2 score 

 

Completion 

  1. Tell the patient the examination is finished βœ… 
  2. Thank patient 
  3. Wash hands βœ‹ 
  4. Summarise what the examination revealed βœ 


Summary:

  1. Greet the patient and explain the procedure
  2. Assess Heart rate to identify tachycardia, bradycardia or atrial fibrillation
  3. Assess Respiration rate to identify bradypnoea or tachypnoea
  4. Assess Oxygen saturation to identify whether it is scale 1 or 2
  5. Assess Systolic blood pressure (manually or accurately)
  6. Assess Consciousness to identify whether the patient is: alert, confused, responds too sound/pain/neither
  7. Assess Temperature using a tympanic thermometer


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