Ask any emergency responder, and they'll tell you the critical role portable suction plays in maintaining airway patency. No other tool can remove blood, vomit, or sputum from the airway, or allow you to visualize the cords before intubation.
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Ask any emergency responder, and they'll tell you the critical role portable suction plays in maintaining airway patency. No other tool can remove blood, vomit, or sputum from the airway, or allow you to visualize the cords before intubation.
Topics: Medical Suction
Although many first responders express reservations about airway suctioning, it is a potentially life-saving procedure that, when performed correctly, has a low risk of complications. With both cold and flu season and allergies causing year-round respiratory issues, it is always a great time for first responders to brush up on their airway management skills. Continuing education classes and regular drills can prepare you to manage even difficult airways. It’s equally important to be mindful of the main complications of suctioning. Awareness of these potential complications can guide your technique while encouraging your team to remain vigilant and diligent.
Topics: Medical Suction
Posted by Sam D. Say
May 16, 2026 8:00:01 AM
The patient has suffered a gunshot wound to the chest, and his blood pressure is dangerously low. You’ve covered the entry wound to prevent a sucking wound, but the patient is exhaling copious bloody froth. You successfully intubate the patient and are bagging, with good chest rise, but the bloody froth continues to interfere with air exchange. It’s time to suction the tube.
Topics: Airway management, Medical Suction
Topics: Medical Suction
In prehospital and emergency settings, oral suctioning may be overlooked as a basictask that is performed without harm to the patient. The reality is, oral suctioning is not without its risks and complications. In addition to complications related to the procedure itself, oral suctioning complications may arise because of ineffective or incorrect technique. Let’s explore the various oral suctioning procedure complications and discuss ways you can prevent them in your patients.
Topics: Medical Suction
Posted by Scott Eamer
Sep 20, 2025 8:00:00 AM
Users of battery-powered portable suction devices often comment that it “sucks”. This can be interpreted in two ways: either negatively or positively. When the negative sentiment applies, there’s no need to despair or throw the unit across the room.
Topics: Battery-powered suction, Airway management, Medical Suction
Posted by Sam D. Say
Aug 14, 2025 8:00:00 AM
A hospital visit can save a patient’s life. It can also destroy it if they pick up a virulent healthcare-associated infection (HAI). The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) estimates that on any given day, 1 in 31 hospital patients has at least one HAI.
Posted by Sam D. Say
Jul 3, 2025 8:00:00 AM
A medical suction pump is a key piece of equipment for oral surgery. The right suction machine improves patient outcomes, reduces the risk of complications, and can promptly intervene in the event of a serious dental emergency.
Topics: Medical Suction
As a foundational tool in the basic airway management toolkit, bag valve mask ventilation can save lives, relieve patient stress, and make transport easier. Bag valve mask ventilation is appropriate when a patient shows signs of hypoxic respiratory failure, apnea, or hypoxically induced altered mental states. Patients who are hyperventilating or have sustained injuries that reduce respiratory effort may also require ventilation. It may be appropriate to ventilate women in labor when there is reason to believe that they are not getting adequate oxygen or are so fatigued that breathing becomes difficult.
Topics: Medical Suction
Posted by Sam D. Say
Jun 19, 2025 8:00:00 AM
A suction machine is a key component of any medical toolkit. In hospital settings, it prevents aspiration and protects the airway during medical procedures ranging from routine to revolutionary. SSCOR offers a range of suction devices for every agency and in every need.
Topics: Medical Suction
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