A pediatric care and resuscitation cart: One community hospital's ED experience

Similar documents
Description of Essential Criteria for PREPARED Emergency Department

Commercial Ambulance Services. Annual Renewal & Inspection Application Packet NEONATAL SERVICE INFORMATION

Minimum equipment and drug lists for cardiopulmonary resuscitation. Mental health Inpatient care

MEDICINES CONTROL COUNCIL

A. Administration and Coordination of the Emergency Department (ED) for the Care of Children.

Please provide us with the following information, in case we need to contact you to clarify any of your responses: Name: Title/Position: Phone number:

Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation

Guideline for Neonatal Resuscitation GL443

TEXAS FACILITY READINESS PROGRAM CHECK LIST

Page 1 of 4 No.: 5.20A SUBJECT: CARDIOPULMONARY RESUSCITATION CODE BLUE

TEXAS EMSC PROGRAM EMS RECOGNITION CHECK LIST

North York General Hospital Policy Manual

Medication Administration Using the Home Pump (Eclipse)

DETERIORATING PATIENT & RESUSCITATION POLICY

About the Critical Care Center

Burn Intensive Care Unit

Checking, Restocking and Management of Medical Resus Bag Procedure

St. Vincent s Health System Page 1 of 8. Nursing Administration HOSPITAL SHARED POLICY?

2016 SUMMER STUDENT NURSE EXTERNSHIP PROGRAM SKILLS CHECK LIST

SAN FRANCISCO EMERGENCY MEDICAL SERVICES AGENCY EMERGENCY MEDICAL SERVICES AT SPECIAL EVENTS

Skills/Experience Checklist Home Health Registered Nurse

Nursing. Lab Name Location Person in Charge Programs Served Courses Served. M Muna Al -Tamimi Nursing Department

Guidelines on Postanaesthetic Recovery Care

A AIRWAY Open the Airway B BREATHING Deliver two (2) Breaths. Code Blue Policy. Indications for Calling A Code Blue

PICU tracheostomy protocol

Policies and Procedures. RNSP: RN Procedure. I.D. Number: 1067

Medical Simulation Orientation

SAN FRANCISCO EMERGENCY MEDICAL SERVICES AGENCY PREHOSPITAL PERSONNEL STANDARDS & SCOPE OF PRACTICE

Texas EMSC State Partnership Program Voluntary Recognition Program APPLICATION FOR ENROLLMENT

the victorian paediatric emergency transport service pets

DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES CENTERS FOR MEDICARE & MEDICAID SERVICES Medication Administration Observation

SPECIAL MEMORANDUM. All Fresno/Kings/Madera/Tulare EMS Providers, Hospitals, First Responder Agencies, and Interested Parties

OVERVIEW OF THE QUICK RESPONSE SERVICE

Powered by WHO Extranet DataCol Tool for Situational Analysis to Assess Emergency and Essential Surgical Care Reference: Objective:

MedWish International Humanitarian Aid Application

North York General Hospital Policy Manual

NURSING POLICIES, PROCEDURES & PROTOCOLS

COMPANY PROFILE BARONA. PB: No.91457, CR.No Mob: , Website:

REVISED: 7/03, 03/05, 04/08, 3/10, 11/11, 09/13, 3/14,1/15, 4/16

This document is NOT FOR PROMOTIONAL USE. Do not copy, distribute, or share with physicians, staff, or patients. FOR INTERNAL USE ONLY.

Mini Grant Application for FY 18 (July 1, June 30, 2018) DEADLINE: AUGUST 15, 2017

SARASOTA MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

Family/Caregiver Education Checklist Return Demonstration of Knowledge FIRST 24 HOURS

SCOPE OF SERVICES. Services Allowed by Home Instead Senior Care. CAREGivers cannot. Charlotte County, Collier County, and Lee County areas.

Equipment Cleaning Guidelines Template

Z: Perioperative Nursing Specialty

ADC ED/TRAUMA POLICY AND PROCEDURE Policy 221. I. Title Trauma team Activation Protocol/Roles & Responsibilities of the Trauma Team

N C RURAL HEALTH RESEARCH POLICY ANALYSIS CENTER. Pediatric Care in Rural Hospital Emergency Departments. Final Report No. 97.

SARASOTA MEMORIAL HOSPITAL NURSING PROCEDURE

ER ORIENTATION OUTLINE DAY 1

Enterprise Clinical Payment and Coding Policy Committee Approval Date: 3/30/17

S T A N D A R D O P E R A T I N G G U I D E L I N E

Endotracheal Intubation Adult (April 2013)

North York General Hospital Policy Manual

PRACTICE GUIDELINE EM014 IMPLEMENTATION OF THE SOUTH AFRICAN TRIAGE SCALE

Indications for Calling A Code Blue or Pediatric Medical Emergency

Texas Concept-Based Curriculum NTCC ADN Program RNSG 1216 Professional Nursing Competencies Fall 2015

Policy for use of the Royal Marsden Manual of Clinical Nursing Procedures (9th Edition)

Department of Health and Wellness Emergency Care Standards April 2014

Aneurin Bevan Health Board Cardiopulmonary Arrest Response Policy

Chapter I of Title 10 (HEALTH) of the Official Compilation of Codes, Rules and Regulations

FACILITY RECOGNITION RENEWAL APPLICATION PACKET

MEDICATION ADMINISTRATION: BELOW THE DRIP CHAMBER

RNSG Pre-Class Activities REQUIRED Ticket to Lab*

Administration, Personnel and Policy for the Care of Pediatric Patients in the Emergency Department

Berinert Home Infusion Program. By: Loris Aro RN INNOMAR STRATEGIES

PROCEDURAL SEDATION AND ANALGESIA: HOSPITAL-WIDE POLICY

Infection Control Policy and Procedure Manual. Post-Anesthesia Care Unit (Recovery Room) Page 1 of 6

New Resident and Medical Student Orientation by Core Nursing

Standard Operating Procedure. for the Retrieval Nurse

Attachment A The Quality Colloquium at Harvard University VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System Safety Checklist Program August 27, 2003

INPATIENT Annual Core Competency Performance Stations (Nursing) 2010 (Unlicensed Staff Direct & Non-Direct Care Providers * )

Clinical Practice Guide

PATIENT CARE MANUAL PROCEDURE

Provision of First Aid

Iowa Department of Public Health BUREAU OF EMERGENCY MEDICAL SERVICES. Promoting and Protecting the Health of Iowans through EMS

Testing the Effectiveness of a New Device to Prevent Medical Line Entanglement in Pediatric Patients

Licensing of Emergency Medical Services Agencies 350 Capitol Street, Room 425 Charleston, WV (304)

Skilled Nursing Facility Admission Orders

ASEPTIC TECHNIQUE LEARNING PACKAGE

N: Emergency Nursing. Alberta Licensed Practical Nurses Competency Profile 135

University of Massachusetts, Amherst College of Nursing Clinical Makeup Policy

Disposing of Medical Waste A Quick-Reference Guide

R. John Brewer NREMT-P Dental Education Inc. MEDICAL EMERGENCIES IN THE DENTAL OFFICE

BP U.S. Pipelines & Logistics (USPL) Safety Manual Page 1 of 7

Customizable Nursing Assistant Kits

Effective: Revised: April 15, 2016 SUCTIONING, MODIFIED STERILE TRACHEAL

Course Outline and Assignments

CHALLENGE OF NURS 205 (DRUG DOSAGE CALCULATION) AND/OR NURS 212 (PHARMACOLOGY FOR NURSES) BY EXAM

Clinic al Pathway: Ventricular Septal Defect (VSD) Repair

Regions Hospital Delineation of Privileges Nurse Practitioner

Department of Emergency Medical Services

SAMPLE Certificate IV in Nursing (Enrolled/Division 2 Nursing) Version 1. Clinical Record Book TAFE NSW Component. HLT07 Health Training Package

Isolette TI500 Neonatal Transport

St. Vincent s East Page 1 of 5

Five Top Tips to Prevent Infections in Long-term Care Settings

Learning Objectives. Successful Antibiotic Stewardship. Byron Health Center & GrandView Pharmacy

Office Preparedness for Pediatric Emergencies. Instructor Manual M S C

Center for Disability Leadership

Giving Intravenous (IV) Nutrition Through a Central Line with a CADD Pump

Transcription:

Melquist/JOURNAL OF EMERGENCY NURSING abuse. The Center promotes awareness of child sexual abuse by stocking parent education pamphlet racks in the pediatric unit and the ED lobby, presenting sexual abuse awareness programs to local teachers and social workers, and producing and distributing pamphlets to local physicians to promote the use of the Care Center. The team has also conducted a sexual abuse grand rounds and seminars on domestic violence, and the physicians have taught medical residents about the signs of sexual trauma in children. Donations from the hospital foundation and several local organizations were used to purchase equipment and parent education materials, and for staff development. This has been an exciting and busy few years for the Care Center staff. Much work still needs to be done, but the group is proud of its accomplishments. Children are being examined in a very "pro-child" environment, parents are being given much-needed information, important evidence is being collected and shared with the authorities, and the relationship between the Care Center and the county children's center has been strengthened. One of the major accomplishments has been the formation of a truly collaborative practice between the Care Center nurses and physicians. This has contributed to making the Care Center a productive and successful experience for all involved. A pediatric care and resuscitation cart: One community hospital's ED experience Author: Joan Elaine Begg, RN, CEN, Centerville, Massachusetts I n September 1993, the Cape Cod Hospital Emergency Center's staff moved into its brand-new 20,000 sq. ft. emergency center. Although the new emergency department was state of the art, the pediatric cart was antiquated. Many of the staff members were CEN certified with Pediatric Advanced Life Support (PALS) training, so the need to update the cart was evident. As the staff nurse in charge of stocking and ordering supplies, I worked with the clinical coordinator and clinical educator to purchase a cart that would provide adequate space for storage of the specific equipment and sizes needed, as well as ease of use in emergency situations. We have used the Broselow Tape* for many years as recommended by the PALS course and benefit from its easily understandable format. Initially we chose color-coded plastic bags to contain the different sized *Broselow Pediatric Emergency Tape is a trademark of Broselow Medical Technologies, Hickory, N.C. No endorsement of this product is implied. Ms. Begg is a staff nurse, Emergency Department, Cape Cod Hospital, Hyannis, Massachusetts. For reprints, write Joan Elaine Begg, RN, CEN, 112 Emerson Way, Centerville, MA 02632. J EMERG NURS 1995;21:555-9. Copyright 9 1995 by the Emergency Nurses Association. 0099-1767/95 $5.00 + 0 18/9/68031 equipment. We liked the idea of having the specific sized equipment for each weight range readily packaged, but the plastic bags would not allow the different catheters to lie flat. After some time, and with frequent checking, many of the sterile packages became An attendee of the ENA Scientific Assemblies for many years, I had a chance to view many storage carts offered by different companies. ripped and sterility was not intact. It became apparent that a different arrangement was necessary. As an attendee of the ENA Scientific Assemblies for many years, I had a chance to view many storage carts offered by different companies. I wanted a cart that would provide goodqooking storage, ease of use in an emergency, plus adequate room to accommodate the many different size ranges as defined by the Broselow system. We ultimately purchased an upright rolling cart December 1995 555

JOURNAL OF EMERGENCY NURSING/Begg Figure 1 Inside each of the top nine drawers is a removable plastic tray complete with a clear Lucite plastic cover. This allows the contents to remain dustffee at all times, while maintaining precise visibility of its contents. This makes "cart checking" much easier. with nine drawers from Armstrong (Armstrong Medical Industries Inc,, Lincolnshire, Ill.) The basic cart was accessorized with a three-tier trellis device outfitted with clear plastic tilt-out bins, plastic traydrawer liners with clear lids and a modular divider system, side shelf, attached IV pole, oxygen tank brackets, and cardiac board. The cart was both good looking and very functional because all items were either easily accessible from the labeled drawers or clearly visible in the clear plastic bins. The top eight drawers are 3 inches deep; the bottom drawer is 6 inches deep. The drawers can be secured with a cutaway banding system, making shift checks easier. The cart is kept secured until needed, when the band is cut away. When the cart is no longer in use, the supplies are replenished by the nursing personnel and the cart is then resecured. If the cart is found to be unbanded during shift checks (once every 24 hours by a specifically designated nurse), then the cart is totally checked for its contents. There is a platform space on top for storage as well as a trellis-type storage system that holds plastic bins for smaller items mounted on top of the platform. A rigid CPR board and attached IV pole complete the cart. Inside each of the top nine drawers is a removable plastic tray complete with clear plastic covers. These covers keep stored items dust free and visible. The fact that the drawers are readily removable makes cleaning much easier, but more importantly, in the event of two simultaneous pediatric emergencies, the appropriate tray can be removed from the cart and used in a different room. The first day our cart was in use this scenario happened. While the cart was in use for the first child, the red drawer was removed and taken to another room for the second child. The readily accessible equipment saved valuable time and reduced stress. Each tray is sectioned with plastic dividers that can be moved if the contents change in the future. The clear covers are labeled with the contents and specific sizes of the items that are directly under each label. This reduces time-consuming searches for needed items. The specific sizes are prominently displayed when the cart is restocked. See Table 1 for the contents and arrangement of the drawers in our storage cart. Pediatric bag-valve-mask devices hang from the attached IV pole. Intravenous infusion devices are readily available in the acute care areas and because of space limitations are not specifically attached to the pediatric cart. Other resuscitation equipment that may be needed, including specialized sterile suture trays, sterile pediatric tracheostomy kits, heart monitor/ defibrillator, and blood glucose monitoring equipment, is kept routinely in the acute care areas and therefore is not stored on the cart. The only other equipment we commonly use in infant and neonatal emergencies is an infant warming 556 Volume 21, Number 6

Begg/JOURNAL OF EMERGENCY NURSING Figure 2 We p u r c h a s e d an upright, rolling cart from the A r m s t r o n g Company, a n d c u s t o m i z e d it w i t h d r a w e r s t h a t w e r e color coordinated to the colors of the Broselow Tape. We a c c e s s o r i z e d the cart w i t h a side shelf, a three-tier trellis device outfitted w i t h clear Lucite tilt-out bins, a n d a n a t t a c h e d IV pole. Figure 3 One of t h e m o s t i m p o r t a n t features of the cart, is t h e removability of the individual drawer liners. This allows us, in t h e e v e n t of two simultaneous pediatric e m e r g e n c i e s, to move a specific drawer to another room a n d treat both p a t i e n t s in a timely a n d pediatric-specific manner. December 1995 5 5 7

OURNAL OF EMERGENCY NURSING/Begg Table 1 Pediatric equipment cart contents Top row bins (left to right) Pediatric pulse oximeter cables (connector cable to our Hewlett-Packard monitor system) Nelleor Oxisensor transducers (3 sizes) 1-20 (Infant 1-20 kg) D-20 (Pediatric 10-50 kg) N-25 (Neonatal/Adult <3 kg, >40 kg) Oxygen face masks Toddler and child sizes Urine collection devices Newborn and Pediatric sizes Child row bins Pediatric cardiac monitor electrodes Infant blood pressure cuffs, disposable style Infant (8-13 cm) Child (12-19 cm) Blood pressure cuffs for use with automatic blood pressure monitor Infant (8-13 cm) Child (12-19 cm) Baptismal water Bottom row bins Neonatal blood pressure cuffs for use with automatic blood pressure monitor Sizes #1, #2, #3, #4, #5 Pediatric nonrebreather oxygen masks Nasal cannulas Infant size Pediatric size Additional banding units and scissors Side shelf Automatic blood pressure monitoring device Reference books Top drawer (Beige) Broselow tape McGill forceps ( Respiratory syncytial virus culture swabs Blood glucose oxidase sticks (alternative please use glucometer) 10% dextrose feeding solution (x2 with nipples) Umbilical catheter tape Calculator Laryngescope handles Blades Size 0 straight (x2) Size 1 straight (x2) Size 2 straight (xl) Size 2 curved (xl) Bulbs 04700 (x2) 04800 (x2) Extra C batteries Catheter adapters Pacifiers 3 oz. blue bulb syringe Lancets Spinal needles, #22 1", #22 1~" (3 each) Ampicillin, 500 mg vial (x2) Gentamycin, 80 mg vial (x2) Heparin, 1000 mg vial (x5) Pediatric digoxin, 0.1 mg ampule (x3) Neonatal naloxone (Narcan), 0.02 mg/ml vial ( Pediatric digoxin, 0.1 mg ampule (x3) Sodium bicarbonate, 4.2% 2.5 meq (0.5 meq/ml) (x3) Pediatric atropine, 0.25 mg (0.05 mg/ml) (x2) 25% Dextrose, 2.5 gm (250 mg/ml) (x3) Red drawer (neonate [3-4 kg] and infant [4-8 kg]) Neonatal endotracheal tubes 2.0 ( 2.5 (x2) 3.0 (x2) Infant endotracheal tubes 3.0 (x2), 5F 8F Female catheter kit (xl) 8F Foley catheters (x2) Sizes 0, 00, 000 Knit caps Pink and blue Neonatal padded armboard 8F (x3) 5F-8F Feeding tubes 8F Infant gavage trays Lavender drawer (Small Child [8.5-11 kg]) 4.5 ( 8F to 10F Foley catheters, (x2) each size Small child size 6 Knit caps Pink and blue 8F (x2) 8F Infant gavage set 10F Salem sump tubes (continued) 558 Volume 21, Number 6

Begg/JOURNAL OF EMERGENCY NURSING Table 1 (continued) Yellow drawer (Child [12-14 kg]) 4.5 (x2) Pediatric equipment cart contents 10F Foley catheter 8F Female catheterization kit 12F Foley catheter Child size 7 8F to 10F (x2 each) White drawer (Child [14-18 kg]) 4.5 (x2) 10F to 12F Foley catheter 8F Female catheterization kit Child size 7 10F to 12F, xl each Blue drawer (Child [18-23 kg]) 10F to 12F Foley cateters (x2 each) Child size 7 and small adult Nasogastric tube 12F to 14F (x2 each) Orange drawer (Child/SmaU Adult [24-32 kg]) 6.5 (x2) 12F Foley catheter (x2) Child size 7 and small adult Nasogastric tube 14F, 16F, 18F ( each) Green drawer (Large child/small adult [32-34 kg]) 6.5 (x2) 7.0 (x2) Urinary catheter 12F Foley catheter ( Medium adult 12F (x2) --18F Large Bottom Drawer Pediatric blood tubes/heel warmers Intraosseous needles T-Port connectors Assorted umbilical vessel catheters, 3.5F and 5F Bile bag for connecting nasogastric tubes to gravity drainage (wall suction too strong) Umbilical catheterization kit In-line IV burrettes Pediatric stethoscope Pediatric internal jugular IV insertion kit #12 and #20 Trochar kits Pediatric arm boards Butterfly needles, assorted sizes #22 and #24 Angiocatheter or Jelco IV catheters table, which provides for a lighted and warm treatment area for our smallest patients. The table is kept in the nursery and is readily available whenever we need to use it. We have found this pediatric cart system works well and has met all our needs to date. A movable cart allows us to handle a pediatric emergency in any of our six cardiac resuscitation rooms and easily bring the equipment to that area. Our hospital's recovery room staff is following our lead and is duplicating this cart for their pediatric emergency preparedness. December 1995 559