Intubate in a sentence as a verb

Here response was, "If I were the last person alive, I could intubate.

The aisle of an airplane would be an awesome place to intubate someone.

I routinely intubate patients with a particular type of tool because that is what I feel most comfortable with and I have trained with.

That's why they wouldn't have been able to do anything for him. They don't have the means to intubate him. They only handle minor physical injuries, x-rays, vaccines, and things treatable by routine prescriptions.

> If there is no bed, respirator...Most of the people who go on respirators die. If the health system is going to be our weapon here until the vaccine is developed, we need to find ways to manage the disease before it gets to the point where we intubate people.

I couldn't help myself, and said, "No I'm not." I heard several colorful words from the Doc, followed by "intubate", followed by "get the paddles", and then "clear" - apparently it was real balancing act as they tried to get me under again while the Doc tried to hurry to complete his act.

Something's got to interview, intubate, suture, palpate, and prescribe all those bleeding, festering, diabetic masses flowing into the ER like the tide of the Thames.

If you're a normal person with a family and their own field of expertise who doesn't have time to take an EMT course and learn how to intubate an unconscious blunt force trauma victim, well then **** you.

Ventilators are useful, but now that we have more experience, we've learned that you don't need to intubate as early as originally thought, so the original concern that we will run out of ventilators is much less.

So you need to be oxygenating in a clinical setting because you need people immediately available to intubate in case your oxygenated patient starts drowning in their own fluids, which they do often.

Instead of: "do you want us to do cpr if your heart stops and/or intubate" ... I should be saying, "do you want your last dying moment to have someone beating on your chest breaking all your ribs while another person shoves a tube down your throat as you get pumped full of *****.

You don't always intubate when someone's under general anaesthesia - it depends on the person, the level of anaesthesia needed, the anaesthesiologist's judgement call of the risks of intubating vs not intubating, the type of surgery and length of surgery.

There are literally thousands of approaches, drug combinations, and "gotchas" to deal with, in all sorts of situations -- right the way from the straightforward and simple to patients with massive facial injuries where it is very difficult to know how to intubate them without causing further damage.

Intubate definitions

verb

introduce a cannula or tube into; "Cannulate the blood vessel in the neck"

See also: cannulate cannulize cannulise canulate