Blood Draw

What a great job you have, it must be great to be a helper in this awful doom that surrounds us.
My wife and I just retired from FT work but a Florida Paramedic never really retires.
So I still pull shifts at my EMS station as well as the occasional weekend in the ER.
It's very rewarding work......though I dare say, not usually fit for public consumption.
It's a harsh world out there.
 

Before my yearly blood test, the nurse tells me to drink lots of water beforehand, apparently it's harder to find a good vein in older people (like me) :)
I've never been told that, but even tho' I'm not yet in the older age group.. I have always been someone where they have trouble finding a vein in my arm, .. so as I'm going to have blood drawn today, I might drink some extra water... (y)
 
Drinking extra water does help on a blood draw. I’ve done this for years and only once did it go badly. Three sticks and nothing. I told the fellow you’ve got one more chance and I’m outta here. He got it right on the forth try.
I too, have been told, and found it helps, to be sure to have had some water beforehand.

Plus, I haven't tried it before, but that threat method of yours,
might be additionally successful. :giggle::LOL::ROFLMAO:;):love:
 
My wife had this happen once and if I remember correctly, the nurse said that her vein had collapsed. The blood was then drawn from the other arm.
 
I don't mind getting blood drawn. Yes, there have been a couple of times that it was a tad painful and I'd tell them. They'd switch to the other arm.
 
When I lived in the south of England, the nurses at my local health centre were useless at finding a vein, and giving a blood sample was unpleasant. Here in Scotland, they have no trouble and drawing blood is virtually painless, so perhaps they use a different technique. Both my Covid jabs were painless .
 
The last time I donated blood was so painful that my vein was pulsing. I opted for them to continue, which was foolish. The vein collapsed, and it took several months for it to get back to normal.

When blood was drawn from the top of my hand, it was extremely painful. That was the only time I had it taken that way. The technicians at my doctor's clinic are very good.
 
We're all different and pain is subjective. Needles whether for shots or blood draws have never made me anxious--even as a kid getting smallpox and Polio Vaccines (Only ones i got as a kid) i watched while all the other kids turned away, many of them crying before it was even their turn. The person doing it makes a big difference and in my experience it doesn't matter what their official title is, some are just more conscientious and/or experienced. But our attitude can make a difference too, because if we let a bad experience make us anxious about the next blood draw we might unconsciously tense up or our anxiety could effect the tech. Have had a lot of draws in my life for various tests, and as a single Mom i sold plasma on regular basis for weeks at a time for a bit of extra $$ for kids' birthdays or Christmas. i've have bad experiences with blood draws, but good ones far out number the bad. And i could usually understand why, tho not always. i learned to give them a heads up that my veins are quite visible on inner arm but prone to 'rolling'. i also don't let the bad ones make me tense about future ones.

One time when i was around 20 a Nursing Supervisor was standing barely a foot behind the person doing the finger prick type draw. After the 6th time produced no blood i looked the Supervisor in the eyes and said 'Do you mind? You're making her nervous, but that's my fingers getting stuck.' She stepped away and sure enough the tech got it on the very next stick after mouthing 'thank you' to me. A year or two later, a male Phlebotomist was supposedly taking blood from vein in left arm, but when i unfolded it for him to put band aid on it the blood spurted across the room in a huge arc. i immediately folded my arm up and got the spot above my heart while he asked 'Are you a bleeder?' i said 'No, but shouldn't you have asked that before?'
Applying pressure we got it stopped and i went on my way to my night job as a proof- encoder at bank. By time i got there from Jersey i had a black and blue line running down my arm to wrist. Proof encoding then involved sitting at machine with stacks of checks, using a keypad with my right hand to enter pertinent info of top check, then using left hand to drop it into a slot where it got the info got stamped onto it and it went to correct end spot (the machine sorted them by bank drawn on part of the info we entered). i was efficient (fast and accurate)usually but by this night my arm was sore and a half hour in my left hand numb--i could not feel it grasping the checks costing me time to look to make sure every time. Had to go home. By next day i could feel with that hand. The next time i needed a blood draw i mentioned it, and that tech said the guy had probably hit artery instead of vein. The ugly line of bruising lasted for a few days.

The worst experience was still ahead of me in my early 40's. i was selling plasma and a tech got no blood after placing the needle, instead of taking it out and trying again, she tried adjusting the position where it was (apparently had gone all the way through the vein) and i promptly went shocky (at least a few seconds totally 'gone') but came around to a worried group of folks standing over me debating what to do. They gave me some juice and i sat awhile then went home by bus. Had an ugly bruise in crook of elbow from that one too.

i figure 3 bad experiences out of the dozens i've had in my life isn't a bad ratio.
 
My clinic also told me to guzzle water before coming in but they could not get much flow and it took forever to get the amount they wanted. No one knew why.
 
In olden days, for a 'fasting' blood draw, the instructions were 'nothing to eat or drink after midnight'. Most have changed that to include 'except water and black coffee' because the body needs sufficient moisture for blood to flow freely.
Yep, and most naturally non caffienated herbal teas (as long as you don't add sugar) will process as water in the body without impacting blood sugar results. i confirmed this with a doctor because except for a couple of brief periods when i had gestational diabetes (2nd time it lingered after the birth for a few months) i could fast with impunity but i have since childhood been someone who has to have my fluids.
 
Mitch, I've had lots of blood draws. The ones that burn or hurt are caused by inexperienced vampires. The good one rubs the alcohol wipe over the vein. Then they fan it with another gauze wipe. In goes the needle no pain. If they don't let the alcohol completely dry major pain for me.
 
Amazing, but I don't fear needles and/or the pain. But, the sight of blood is too much for me. Last time they drew vial after vial at the Oncologist's... I got faint like. lol I've also had my share of blood draws; I have gotten use to it. I've also received transfusions (my own blood, thank goodness) after my hysterectomy. I've been thru heck but have survived.

p.s. I usually turn away from the sight of the blood being drawn.
 


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