Friday, February 26, 2010

Theater Relating to My Major

Theater Relating to My Major

My major that I am taking in college is Respiratory Therapy. I want to give you a little background of what a Respiratory Therapist does and then I will relate it to the theater. Respiratory therapists—also known as respiratory care practitioners—evaluate, treat, and care for patients with breathing or other cardiopulmonary disorders. Practicing under the direction of a physician, respiratory therapists assume primary responsibility for all respiratory care therapeutic treatments and diagnostic procedures, including the supervision of respiratory therapy technicians. They consult with physicians and other healthcare staff to help develop and modify patient care plans. Therapists also provide complex therapy requiring considerable independent judgment, such as caring for patients on life support in intensive-care units of hospitals.

Respiratory therapists evaluate and treat all types of patients, ranging from premature infants whose lungs are not fully developed to elderly people whose lungs are diseased. They provide temporary relief to patients with chronic asthma or emphysema and give emergency care to patients who are victims of a heart attack, stroke, drowning, or shock.

Respiratory therapists interview patients, perform limited physical examinations, and conduct diagnostic tests. For example, respiratory therapists test a patient's breathing capacity and determine the concentration of oxygen and other gases in a patient's blood. They also measure a patient's pH, which indicates the acidity or alkalinity of the blood. To evaluate a patient's lung capacity, respiratory therapists have the patient breathe into an instrument that measures the volume and flow of oxygen during inhalation and exhalation. By comparing the reading with the norm for the patient's age, height, weight, and sex, respiratory therapists can provide information that helps determine whether the patient has any lung deficiencies. To analyze oxygen, carbon dioxide, and blood pH levels, therapists draw an arterial blood sample, place it in a blood gas analyzer, and relay the results to a physician, who then makes treatment decisions.

To treat patients, respiratory therapists use oxygen or oxygen mixtures, chest physiotherapy, and aerosol medications—liquid medications suspended in a gas that forms a mist which is inhaled. They teach patients how to inhale the aerosol properly to ensure its effectiveness. When a patient has difficulty getting enough oxygen into his or her blood, therapists increase the patient's concentration of oxygen by placing an oxygen mask or nasal cannula on the patient and setting the oxygen flow at the level prescribed by a physician. Therapists also connect patients who cannot breathe on their own to ventilators that deliver pressurized oxygen into the lungs. The therapists insert a tube into the patient's trachea, or windpipe; connect the tube to the ventilator; and set the rate, volume, and oxygen concentration of the oxygen mixture entering the patient's lungs.

Therapists perform regular assessments of patients and equipment. If a patient appears to be having difficulty breathing or if the oxygen, carbon dioxide, or pH level of the blood is abnormal, therapists change the ventilator setting according to the doctor's orders or check the equipment for mechanical problems.

Respiratory therapists perform chest physiotherapy on patients to remove mucus from their lungs and make it easier for them to breathe. Therapists place patients in positions that help drain mucus, and then vibrate the patients' rib cages, often by tapping on the chest, and tell the patients to cough. Chest physiotherapy may be needed after surgery, for example, because anesthesia depresses respiration. As a result, physiotherapy may be prescribed to help get the patient's lungs back to normal and to prevent congestion. Chest physiotherapy also helps patients suffering from lung diseases, such as cystic fibrosis, that cause mucus to collect in the lungs.

Therapists who work in home care teach patients and their families to use ventilators and other life-support systems. In addition, these therapists visit patients in their homes to inspect and clean equipment, evaluate the home environment, and ensure that patients have sufficient knowledge of their diseases and the proper use of their medications and equipment. Therapists also make emergency visits if equipment problems arise.

That is just a little description of what a Respiratory Therapist does. You can compare the respiratory field to theater in many ways. In theater we are always trying to put on an act on stage to get peoples attention, with respiratory you have to give the attention to the patients. The patients are counting on you to get them the help that they need. In theater the actors are the patients. You have to give them the attention that they need or the don’t perform well.

Respiratory therapists are always evaluating people, this is true for theater as well. We are all being evaluated in many different ways. It gets to be more serious in respiratory then it does in theater because if a therapist makes a mistake we could seriously injure or kill someone. If you make a mistake in theater you really can’t hurt anyone, unless something catastrophic happens.

We can compare lighting and costume from a respiratory therapist to theater as well. When you do a play in theater you have various lighting and attire. With respiratory you really have a set costume to wear(uniform), and if you work in the hospital you normally have pretty good lighting. The lighting is a very important part of how you do your work, as so is the uniform you wear. We are professional people and we have to be able to look and see well.

In theater there is normally a script that you have to follow. In respiratory there are many steps that you have to follow as well to care for the patient. Sometimes you may have to be pulled from one patient to go care for another. This really doesn’t happen in theater, in theater you have a certain script to follow and you go by it.

Those are just some ways that theater relates to respiratory therapy. I hope you enjoyed my paper. This concludes my paper in relating theater to respiratory therapy.

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