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I have to get an iv and I'm deathly afraid of needles what should i do? |
please help! Alex, I know how you feel. I have very tiny veins and very few that work, so getting an IV is excruciating. I learned 10 years ago, when I needed surgery, that there was a way to keep me from feeling anything when getting an IV. I had a really nice doctor, who did not rush things and listened to me when I told him about my vein problem. He told me not to worry; he left the room and when he came back he had a can of a spray that froze the area where they were going to do the IV. I felt absolutely nothing when they put in the IV. let the Dr or nurse know ,so they can give you a pill to relax=good luck if psyching yourself up doesn't work for you, call the doc's office. they can prescribe you something to calm you down before you go. you'll need someone to drive you though. I draw blood for a living. First things first make sure you're lying down when they do this. In case you get light headed since you're "deathyly afraid". Drink some water before you do this, so you not too dehydrated. Warn the tech prior to them doing this. Look away and make conversation and next thing you know it'll be over. Good luck!! read a book before they put it in and keep reading it whilst they are putting it in the distraction is better than any thingn else. Dude I have had to have my blood drawn for blood tests since I was 13. The trick is to look away from them as they are getting ready to insert the needle. Demand for a local anaesthetic like EMLA cream or something. The medical personnel will apply the cream and they have to insert the needle quickly. It can be a spray type too. 1. Tell the phlebotomist you're deathly afraid. He/she really needs to know this. I know sometimes they will put stuff on the spot to numb the area. relax, close your eyes and take some deep breaths. Let the nurse know you are not good with needles. they should have you lay down to avoid getting light headed if you are nervous. You can ask the nurse to numb you first. the numbing medication uses a tiny needle and stings briefly but makes getting the IV in alot easier and makes the IV site more comfortable for awhile. your comfort and well being is most important. I've had more IVs stuck in me that I can count. you'll get through this. I used to be terrifed but now that i been through it quite a few times I'm not afraid anymore. |
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I'm sure its unrelated. Relax. Good luck. Let us know how it goes though. ...You need to go to the bathroom. ...Okay, there is no way that you have a piece of metal from the IV in your arm. An IV line (or Intra-Venous line) is placed by use of an over the needle IV Catheter which consists of two parts; the I... When I did my training, most folks were somewhat hesistant to stick their partner. And yeah, that's how you learn. You have a partner and you learn to stick each other. As a rule you start ... You wouldn't want to go any larger than a 25G. ...It can be fairly uncomfortable but you need to explain to them your fear and ask them for a pre-IV pain shot. This is a tiny tiny needle that you barely feel and they inject a pain killer into the... Yes, it's possible to use just one hand to remove the IV tubing from the catheter (the needle doesn't stay in your hand/arm) without removing the catheter, too. There's usually tape... No, it doesn't hurt. Once injected, you will fall asleep in less than 10 seconds. ... |
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