First Aid and Nursing Care for Acute Chlorphenamidine Poisoning

by wrefsprqc on 2012-03-09 11:12:37

Acute chlorphenamidine poisoning patients require immediate first aid and nursing care. Given the large elderly population, the majority of older individuals will continue to live within their families. Therefore, home-based elderly care is crucial.

As people age, physiological changes make them more vulnerable, predisposing them to multiple degenerative diseases. For instance, they may experience vision and hearing loss, reduced mobility, less sensitive reactions, poor self-care abilities, osteoporosis, muscle atrophy, decreased immune function, and most importantly, cognitive decline leading to a loss of initiative in daily life and psychological changes of varying degrees. These can manifest as depression, quietness, introversion, agitation, or irritability.

Home care involves integrating nursing staff into the warmth of family life. On one hand, they directly serve the home care needs. On the other hand, they also provide help and guidance to other family members. Care for the elderly should cover every small detail, applying holistic nursing concepts to offer comprehensive care and assistance from physical to psychological aspects.

Particularly for widowed or empty-nest elderly, providing life care and spiritual comfort is essential, making them feel the warmth of home-based care, the superiority of society, and embodying the traditional Chinese virtue of respecting the elderly while meeting their health needs.

In old age, the ability to perceive decreases, and sensitivity to organ disease responses diminishes. As we treat acute chlorphenamidine poisoning patients, it's important to strengthen care for symptoms like cyanosis, consciousness disturbance, and bleeding cystitis, which has proven to yield good treatment results.