Literature DB >> 25417037

Improving Pediatric Survival from Resuscitation Events: The Role and Organization of Hospital-based Rapid Response Systems and Code Teams.

Elise Willem van der Jagt1.   

Abstract

During the past 10-15 years it has become evident that in spite of the sophistication of medicine, hospitalized patients frequently experience cardiac arrests from which the majority do not survive. A substantial number of these arrests occur on general inpatient units where patients begin to deteriorate but there is a failure of timely recognition so that appropriate intervention can be instituted before the arrest takes place. Much work has been done to determine how survival from adult in-hospital cardiac arrests can be improved by (1) teaching health care providers about resuscitation management using a team approach and (2) more recently, by developing rapid response systems to recognize deteriorating patients early and intervening to prevent the cardiac arrest. The purpose of this review is to outline what is known about the use and organization of resuscitation teams (code teams) and rapid response systems as they apply to pediatric patients. Effort has been made to include the most current pediatric science available as a basis for encouraging the ongoing implementation of hospital team-based systems which appear to be able to improve the outcomes of pediatric in-hospital cardiac and respiratory arrests. Practical suggestions, implementation strategies, potential barriers, and ways to integrate pediatric code teams and rapid response systems into the quality and safety fabric of the hospital are provided.

Entities:  

Year:  2013        PMID: 25417037     DOI: 10.2174/1573396311309020009

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Curr Pediatr Rev        ISSN: 1573-3963


  4 in total

1.  Family-Assisted Severity of Illness Monitoring for Hospitalized Children in Low-Resource Settings-A Two-Arm Interventional Feasibility Study.

Authors:  Amelie O von Saint Andre-von Arnim; Rashmi K Kumar; Jonna D Clark; Benjamin S Wilfond; Quynh-Uyen P Nguyen; Daniel M Mutonga; Jerry J Zimmerman; Assaf P Oron; Judd L Walson
Journal:  Front Pediatr       Date:  2022-05-23       Impact factor: 3.569

Review 2.  Paediatric early warning systems for detecting and responding to clinical deterioration in children: a systematic review.

Authors:  Veronica Lambert; Anne Matthews; Rachel MacDonell; John Fitzsimons
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2017-03-13       Impact factor: 2.692

3.  Optimising paediatric afferent component early warning systems: a hermeneutic systematic literature review and model development.

Authors:  Nina Jacob; Yvonne Moriarty; Amy Lloyd; Mala Mann; Lyvonne N Tume; Gerri Sefton; Colin Powell; Damian Roland; Robert Trubey; Kerenza Hood; Davina Allen
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2019-11-14       Impact factor: 2.692

4.  Development, implementation and evaluation of an evidence-based paediatric early warning system improvement programme: the PUMA mixed methods study.

Authors:  Davina Allen; Amy Lloyd; Dawn Edwards; Kerenza Hood; Chao Huang; Jacqueline Hughes; Nina Jacob; David Lacy; Yvonne Moriarty; Alison Oliver; Jennifer Preston; Gerri Sefton; Ian Sinha; Richard Skone; Heather Strange; Khadijeh Taiyari; Emma Thomas-Jones; Rob Trubey; Lyvonne Tume; Colin Powell; Damian Roland
Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res       Date:  2022-01-02       Impact factor: 2.655

  4 in total

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