Literature DB >> 33541202

Creation of a dedicated line team for critically ill patients with COVID-19: A multidisciplinary approach to maximize resource utilization during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Pooja Nawathe1,2, Robert Wong3, Gabriel Pollock3, Jack Green1, Michael Kissen3, Phillip Ng4, Samuel Cohen3, Joel Barron1, Stephen Robert1, Christy Slingwine3, Paul Frank3, Kaveh Navab3, Doran Kim4, Michael Yang4, Tyler Gouvea3, Calvin Johnson3, Isabel Pedraza4, Evan Zahn1,2.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Pandemics create challenges for medical centers, which call for innovative adaptations to care for patients during the unusually high census, to distribute stress and work hours among providers, to reduce the likelihood of transmission to health care workers, and to maximize resource utilization.
METHODS: We describe a multidisciplinary vascular access team's development to improve frontline providers' workflow by placing central venous and arterial catheters. Herein we describe the development, organization, and processes resulting in the rapid formation and deployment of this team, reporting on notable clinical issues encountered, which might serve as a basis for future quality improvement and investigation. We describe a retrospective, single-center descriptive study in a large, quaternary academic medical center in a major city. The COVID-19 vascular access team included physicians with specialized experience in placing invasive catheters and whose usual clinical schedule had been lessened through deferment of elective cases. The target population included patients with confirmed or suspected COVID-19 in the medical ICU (MICU) needing invasive catheter placement. The line team placed all invasive catheters on patients in the MICU with suspected or confirmed COVID-19. RESULTS AND
CONCLUSIONS: Primary data collected were the number and type of catheters placed, time of team member exposure to potentially infected patients, and any complications over the first three weeks. Secondary outcomes pertained to workflow enhancement and quality improvement. 145 invasive catheters were placed on 67 patients. Of these 67 patients, 90% received arterial catheters, 64% central venous catheters, and 25% hemodialysis catheters. None of the central venous catheterizations or hemodialysis catheters were associated with early complications. Arterial line malfunction due to thrombosis was the most frequent complication. Division of labor through specialized expert procedural teams is feasible during a pandemic and offloads frontline providers while potentially conferring safety benefits.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Techniques and procedures; catheters; dialysis access; economics and health services; intensive care; nursing

Mesh:

Year:  2021        PMID: 33541202     DOI: 10.1177/1129729821991754

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Vasc Access        ISSN: 1129-7298            Impact factor:   2.283


  1 in total

1.  Mass Critical Care Surge Response During COVID-19: Implementation of Contingency Strategies - A Preliminary Report of Findings From the Task Force for Mass Critical Care.

Authors:  Jeffrey R Dichter; Asha V Devereaux; Charles L Sprung; Vikramjit Mukherjee; Jason Persoff; Karyn D Baum; Douglas Ornoff; Amit Uppal; Tanzib Hossain; Kiersten N Henry; Marya Ghazipura; Kasey R Bowden; Henry J Feldman; Mitchell T Hamele; Lisa D Burry; Anne Marie O Martland; Meredith Huffines; Pritish K Tosh; James Downar; John L Hick; Michael D Christian; Ryan C Maves
Journal:  Chest       Date:  2021-09-06       Impact factor: 9.410

  1 in total

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