One of the principles of medication administration in nursing is that nurses don't administer medications they did not personally draw up. This tenet represents best practices for medication safety. It is not likely that an STNA can fill a flu shot syringe and still be considered as using the standard of care.
I felt uneasy when the nurse pulled a syringe out from her cabinet.
For your dog you should fill the syringe to the 0.6 mark on the 1.0 mL syringe. For your cat, you should fill the syringe to halfway between the 0.1 and the 0.2 mark - there are probably smaller dashes between 0.1 and 0.2 to help you with this. If you aren't sure, you should ask your veterinarian to show you on the syringe how full to fill it.
It will be impossible to give .09 ml accurately in a 100 cc syringe! You need a 1cc syringe, not 100. But if you're in the medical field, you should know this... Source: Former veterinary nurse 10 years
Syringe.................Some people use a syringe with drugs
You must have your training and certification before you can work as an STNA.
A homehealth nurse will still give the medication. She need to have an IV needle,saline solution, syringe , plaster and injection site adapter.
No, a tuberculin syringe is intended for use in intradermal injections and the flu shot is given intramuscularly. The needle on a tuberculin syringe is not the right size.
if you need a flu injection the docter uses a SYRINGE to give you them medicine in your arm
syringe
The easiest way to dissolve trimethoprim for oral administration is to drop the tablets into a 60cc syringe - pull the plunger out then drop the tablets into the body of the syringe. Put the plunger back in and depress it until the tablets can't rattle around. Fill a small glass with tap water, then pull water into the syringe. Place a fingertip over the tip of the syringe to seal it, then shake the syringe to get the tablets to dissolve. This may take a few minutes, and the resulting paste/gel/liquid is not going to taste good to your pet so expect to need some help restraining him/her to give the medication.
The word you are seeking is syringe.
Assuming you got the syringe from the veterinarian, all of it.