r/BeAmazed Jun 10 '25

Skill / Talent Chinese nurses use this technique called "flying needle" to draw blood

Blink and miss it!

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u/SecretWitness8251 Jun 10 '25 edited Jun 11 '25

Hi, I'm a vascular access nurse. What in the voodoo shit is this? Gonna need a link because this is gonna need to be my next case study.

Cannot comprehend. Maybe a magnet behind the elbow but how TF does it go directly into the middle of the vessel? Maybe the video is shot in reverse.. no clue.

Edit:

Have since seen numerous videos on this technique and although cool, I will NOT be adopting this into my practice.

118

u/[deleted] Jun 10 '25

Butterfly needle, reasonably large AC veins, just quick flick and it’s in. I don’t think it’s necessarily a new “technique” this is just repetition with that same device a million times and the right patient anatomy for this video. Would like to see this work on dehydrated or heavily calcified/atherosclerotic patients, or people without obvious typical anatomy, but it won’t. I hated butterfly needles, there was almost never a perfect scenario for them outside of maybe peds and high volume draws out of a hand vein.

39

u/SecretWitness8251 Jun 10 '25

Alright, I'm on my way to your house. You can demonstrate on me in the name of science!

33

u/[deleted] Jun 10 '25

If it wasn’t clear, I’m saying this isn’t repeatable and trainable, this is one person who constantly uses butterfly needles, probably outpatient, busy facility, and they’ve been doing this a long time. It’s the phlebotomy equivalent of quick solving a rubics cube, or close up card magic. Muscle memory and a ton of practice. It’s not some special technique you’re just going to pick up with a YouTube video, even if she explained it.

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u/SecretWitness8251 Jun 10 '25

Okay, taking a u-turn to her house then!! SCIENCE

1

u/DreadpirateBG Jun 10 '25

If it’s not trainable then it should not be done. We can’t have techniques out there that can not broken down into trainable steps. For a good reason of maintaining the health of the person having the blood taken, the nurse and the end recipient of the blood. There are procedures for this task for reasons.

4

u/Fairuse Jun 11 '25

It is trainable. Most western medical practitioners feel like it is not worth their time to master such a skill. There are training videos out there. It involves basically spending hundreds if nothing thousands of hours of flicking a needle into a practice target over and over until it becomes a skilled muscle memory.

1

u/Shannon_Foraker Jun 11 '25

So, it's trainable, but not for beginners? Like experts only, before you poke someone in the wrong spot.