Think Like A Provider | For Nurses

Episode 2: The Clinical Case That Changed How I Teach Reasoning

Professor Jennawè

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0:00 | 21:14

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A 23-year-old new mom. "Normal" vital signs. But Jennawè knew she was bleeding to death. This episode breaks down the postpartum hemorrhage case that taught her the most important lesson in clinical reasoning: the body lies, and vital signs lag.

You'll learn:

Why blood pressure is the LAST thing to drop in shock (not the first)

How to recognize compensation before decompensation

The early signs of hemorrhage students always miss

Why "normal" vitals can mean your patient is dying

How to trust your clinical assessment over the monitor

A framework for recognizing shock in ANY patient (not just OB)


Timestamps: 

[0:00] She looked fine—but she was bleeding to death

[3:00] Welcome to Think Like a Provider

[3:30] Why students miss early hemorrhage

[8:45] What compensation actually looks like

[13:20] The crash: when the body can't keep up anymore

[16:40] Why this is so hard to learn

[19:00] Framework for recognizing compensation

[22:30] How this applies beyond OB

Clinical Pearls:

Young, healthy patients can lose 30-40% of blood volume before BP drops

Tachycardia + pale skin + thirst = early shock, even with normal BP

Look at trends (HR 72 → 98 over 30 min) not snapshots

The question isn't "Is this abnormal?" It's "Is this patient working too hard?"

Hosts:

Jennawè Whitley, NP-C, FNP-BC - Nurse Practitioner & Educator

Alice - Engaging Educator & Student Advocate

REFERENCES: 

American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG). (2023). Postpartum Hemorrhage:ACOG Practice Bulletin, Number 183. Obstetrics & Gynecology, 142(4), 974-997. 

Evensen, A., Anderson, J. M., & Fontaine, P. (2021). Postpartum Hemorrhage: Prevention andTreatment. American Family Physician, 103(1), 34-43. 

Pacheco, L. D., Saade, G. R., & Hankins, G. D. V. (2022). Advances in the management of postpartumhemorrhage. American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology, 226(2S), S1009-S1023. 

Shields, L. E., Wiesner, S., Klein, C., et al. (2021). Use of Maternal Early Warning Trigger Tool reducesmaternal morbidity. American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology, 221(6), 527.e1-527.e6. 

Main, E. K., Goffman, D., Scavone, B. M., et al. (2022). National Partnership for Maternal Safety:Consensus Bundle on Obstetric Hemorrhage. Obstetrics & Gynecology, 126(1), 155-162. 

Bienstock, J. L., Eke, A. C., & Hueppchen, N. A. (2021). Postpartum hemorrhage. New EnglandJournal of Medicine, 384(16), 1635-1645. 

Kahr, M. K., Brun, R., Zimmermann, R., & Franke

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