Lesson 1How Sepsis and Septic Shock Develop: Body's Reaction, Organ Failure, and Worsening StagesExplains the body's fight against infection, covering swelling and defence paths, small blood vessel issues, and cell problems. Connects these to organ breakdown, shock advancement, and signs nurses watch closely in the moment.
Body's defence reaction to infection in sepsisBlood vessel damage and fluid leakageSmall vessel and cell power issuesFrom sepsis to septic shock: main shiftsOrgan failure types and SOFA ideasReal-life links to disease processesLesson 2Fluid Treatment Details: Choosing Salts, Quick Doses, and Spotting Too Much FluidLooks at picking salt solutions, dose amounts, and speeds for early sepsis revival. Stresses checking fluid response actively, spotting overload at bedside, and nurse ways to keep blood flow good without harm.
Balanced salts vs regular saline choiceFirst dose plans and check timesStill and moving fluid response methodsSigns of too much fluid at bedsideRecording fluid balance and overall stateTeamwork on reducing fluid plansLesson 3Patient Safety and Sepsis Problems: Kidney Damage, Blood Clot Issues, and Organ Help NeedsCovers usual sepsis-linked problems like sudden kidney harm, blood clotting disorders, breathing failure, and organ aid requirements. Stresses quick spotting, stopping strategies, and nurse care for kidney, breathing, and blood support.
Spotting and grading sudden kidney harmBlood clotting issues, DIC, and bleed risksBreathing failure and machine breathing aidBlood flow support past pressure drugsNurse care for kidney machine therapyStopping and early spotting of problemsLesson 4Recording and Talking: Noting Care Packs, Alert Signs, and Passing Sepsis CareGives details on proper noting of sepsis care packs, vital changes, and actions, plus clear talk on alert signs. Stresses planned passovers, loop-back talk, and lists to keep care flowing smoothly.
Noting sepsis care pack parts and timesRecording blood flow and lactate changesAlert signs and quick help rulesPlanned handover tools for sepsis folksTeam talk best waysLaw and quality sides of recordingLesson 5Drug Bug Control and Timing: First Treatment Pick, Reducing, and Sample ControlCenters on quick first bug-killing drug picks, doses, and giving in sepsis. Looks at getting samples, rechecking treatment with new info, reducing plans, and nurse parts in drug bug control and watching harm.
Time for first bug-killing dose in sepsisFirst treatment pick and local bug mapsGetting samples without slowing treatmentReducing and length of treatmentWatching for bug-killing side harmsNurse parts in control meetingsLesson 6Pressure Drugs and Heart Boosters: When to Use, Dose Aims, Adjusting, Side Harms, and Usual Nurse-Led Plans for NoradrenalineLooks at noradrenaline as main pressure drug in septic shock, focusing on when to use, start doses, adjust ways, watch aims, side harms, and usual nurse-led plans, including safety looks and main line thoughts.
When to use noradrenaline in septic shockStart doses, strength, and adjust stepsMAP aims and blood flow watchingSpotting and handling side harmsMain line use, clear flow, and leak careNurse-led pressure drug adjust plansLesson 7Latest World Sepsis Rules and Packs (Surviving Sepsis Drive): 1-Hour and 3-Hour PartsSums up latest Surviving Sepsis Drive rules and packs, stressing 1-hour and 3-hour parts. Points out time-key nurse actions, local rule changes, and check-back ways to boost following and patient results.
Main ideas of Surviving Sepsis DriveOne-hour pack parts and nurse actionsThree-hour pack parts and orderFitting packs into ward flowsChecking following and back loopsChanging rules to local meansLesson 8Blood Flow Aims in Sepsis: MAP Aims, Lactate-Guided Revival, and Fluid Response CheckSets blood flow aims in sepsis, including MAP aims, lactate clear-up, and flow signs. Looks at bedside check of fluid response and mixing moving signs, scan, and clinical sense in revival choices.
MAP aims and personal blood pressure goalsLactate changes and flow-guided revivalNail bed refill and edge flow signsMoving signs for fluid responsePart of bedside scan in amount checkBalancing fluids, pressure drugs, and heart boostersLesson 9Watching Reaction to Sepsis Treatment: Repeated Lactates, Urine Flow, End-Organ Flow Signs, and Bedside ToolsTells how to watch sepsis treatment reaction using repeated lactates, urine flow, mind state, and other end-organ signs. Covers bedside tools, check oftenness, and noting to guide ongoing revival and reducing.
Repeated lactate measure and meaningUrine flow aims and kidney flowMind state and confusion checkSkin, heat, and flow checkOftenness and setup of recheck roundsChange-based noting and care changesLesson 10Infection Source Control: Main Ideas, Times, and Nurse Teamwork for Steps and ChecksOutlines main ideas of infection source control, including times, teamwork on scans and steps, and talk with multi-team. Points out nurse parts in readying, moving, agreement aid, and after-step watching.
Spotting likely infection sources earlyTime and need for source control actionsTeamwork on scans and bedside stepsBefore-step readying and safety looksAfter-step watching and problem signsNurse part in multi-team planning