Title: Pediatric Transport
1Pediatric Transport Considerations in
Pediatric Care
- Jo Price RN, ARNP, DNP
- ALNW QI Education Department
- Joanne.price_at_airliftnw.org
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3 RECEIVING
REFERRING
4PATIENT CENTERED
- Partnership
- Team work
- Communication
5WHO ARE THESE KIDS?
- 10-18 pre-hospital calls pediatric
- 25-34 emergency room
- Airlift statistics
- 20 of flights are children lt 21 years
- Of this, 57 are trauma
- CSHCN represent 35 to 60 pediatric ALNW TX
- Often higher than AAP statistics
- Reflects use of medical home and survival
- Use of AAP Emergency Sheet?
6Ground versus Air Considerations
- How important is time?
- Time sensitive conditions ischemic stroke,
ischemic limb - Potential to quickly decompensate (ICH,
intra-abdominal injuries, chest trauma, etc) - Unstable patients
- Realistic transport time
- Distance
- Geography (mountain passes, peninsula, islands)
- Traffic patterns
7Air versus Ground Considerations
- Safety risk benefit analysis
- Out of hospital time
- What will the actual uncontrolled time be?
- Crew Capabilities not all ALS crews are the same
- Capacity of ALS crew in community can they
leave? - Altitude
- Cost
8Considerations
- Airway management
- Space limitations
- Light limitations
- IV access
- Temperature control
- Pertinent labs
- glucose, updated ABG/CBG
- OG/NG
9- OR CAN IT WAIT?
- Will it change therapy?
- Hospital CT scan/x-ray Can it be pushed through
in a timely manner or need to be repeated?
10Specific considerations
- Infection/sepsis antibiotics priority
- Lactate and recent blood gas
- Trauma splinting/BB/Pediboard
- Changes occurring in who gets boarded
- Nexus criteria, Canadian C-spine
-
- Bronchiolitics suctioning
- RESPONSE
11- Asthma dexamethasone early. High dosing
albuterol - Croup dexamethasone early. Racemic if stridor at
rest. Humidity minimal evidence - DKA over fluid resuscitation common issue
- 40cc/kg high risk PICU admission
12Medically complex
- CSHCN numbers rising
- Multisystem involvement
- Home equipment?
- significant fraction of health care resources
- More likely to receive advance life support
prehospital procedures - Increased focus of care coordination EIF forms
13Education Resource
- http//depts.washington.edu/pedtraum/
- Online curriculum in the acute assessment and
management of pediatric trauma patients, hosted
by Harborview Medical Center (Seattle, WA) - EMSC (Emergency medical services for children)
National Resource CENTER www.childrensnational.or
g/EMSC (search for prehospital) - SCOPE Special Childrens Outreach prehospital
education. The center for prehospital pediatrics
at Childrens National Medical Center - http//www.childrensnational.org/emsc/pubres/oldto
olboxpages/prehospitaleducation.aspx
14The principle effects that flight has on the
human body
- Hypoxia
- Gas expansion
- Temperature changes
- Noise
- Vibration
15- Disease process that can potentially worsen in
flight?
- Pressurized aircraft (Lear or Turbo-prop)?
- If not pressurized, flight altitude?
16ALNW Rotary Bases
- Bellingham (Airlift 5)
- Arlington (Airlift 6)
- Seattle (Airlift 2)
- Olympia (Airlift 3)
Arlington
17Dedicated Rotary Aircraft
EC 135 (Eurocopter)
Augusta A109 A model
Cruise speed 160 mph, range 200 miles Single
pilot, twin engine. instrument flight capable.
Different stretchers
18Dedicated Fixed Wing Aircraft
- Turbo Commander
- 12 hour based in Yakima
- Lands on shorter runways
- Serves smaller airports Ellensburg, Omak,
Tonasket, Chelan, Sunnyside
19Dedicated fixed wing aircraft
- Two Lear 31 A jets based at Boeing Field
- Serves Eastern Washington, Montana, and Southeast
Alaska - Cruise speed 500 mph, range 1200 miles
- Lear 31A based in Juneau, Alaska
- Serves southeast Alaska
- Cruise speed 500 mph, range 1200 miles
20Rotary/FW Aircraft ALS Equipment
- Transport ventilator (Draeger Oxylog 3000)
- Invasive and non-invasive monitor
- Cardiac monitor/defibrillator with pacing and 12
lead ECG. - Multi-channel infusion pump
- I-Stat
- Glide Scope video-laryngoscopy
21Flight team
- Two critical care nurses
- Pediatric/Neonatal Intensive Care experienced
- Adult Critical Care experienced/Adult Certified
Emergency Nurse - Cross-trained to manage and transport all age
patients, ill or injured - Neonates, pediatrics, adults, high-risk
obstetrics - Trained in altitude flight physiology, aircraft
safety - Certifications ACLS, PALS, NRP, BLS, ATCN
- Airway management adjuncts surgical cric
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24What to expect of crew
- Accurate ETA.if no fog, no snow etc..
- Door closed lt 10 min (RW), Wheels up lt 15
- AIDET
- Prioritization for our circumstances
- Time Management
- lt10 minute field
- lt30 minute interfacility (age specific)
- Medical control contact
- Protocol driven
25Hand-off
- SAMPLE hx. if time or
- D-MIVT report style focus
- Medical necessity Form
- Films/chart with face sheet
- Parental information if ride along (to Comm.)
- Complete name
- Weight
- Priority meds and/or blood products ready to go
26CHANGES
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28CURRENT TRENDS IN PEDIATRICS
29Color Coding Tools
- Tools that help clinicians quickly assess
pediatric patients - select medications, doses, and equipment
- Has the potential to improve pediatric patient
outcomes during resuscitation IF USED CORRECTLY - Broselow Pediatric Emergency Tape and/or the
Broselow Pediatric Emergency Cart. - shown to decrease time to mobilize resuscitation
equipment, and increase the accurate selection of
equipment (Agarwal et.al, 2005).
30Safe Practice Recommendations
- Update tapes. Replace outdated Broselow tapes
with the most recent edition (2011) - ADJUSTMENTS FOR WEIGHT CHANGES
- Standardize concentrations. Provide standard
concentrations for resuscitation medications
stocked - Stock Shortages communication re what is
replaced - Organize carts.
31Simulation training
- Simulation on in-hospital pediatric medical
emergencies trial - Significant delays deviations occur in major
components of pediatric resuscitation - Median time to airway assessment 1.3 minutes
- To administering O2 2 minutes
- To recognize need for IO 3 minutes
- To assess circulation 4 minutes
- To arrival of physician on to floor 3 minutes
- Arrival of first member of actual code team 6
minutes - CPR scenarios elapsed time to starting
compressions 1.5 minutes
32- 75 of codes deviated from AHA PALS
- Communication error 100 of mock codes
- DELAYS WERE NORM NOT EXCEPTION LACK OF TIMELY
INITIATION OF RESUSCITATION MANEUVERS - Importance of floor staff initiating actions
- Leadership important component of successful
teamwork
33KEY TEACHING FOCUS
- Can know the differences between pediatric
patients Adults BUT - IF LACK OF TIMELY CORRECT INTERVENTION OF
RESUSCITATION, IT DOESNT MATTER..
34Airway Controversies
- Cuffed versus Uncuffed Tubes
- Historically not recommended in children under
the age of 8 to 10 years until the mid-1990s. - Pediatric anesthetists intensivists use
2000-2001 - Current evidence demonstrates this recommendation
is outdated.
35- Two recent transports
- Received 4 yr old with 5.5 cuffed ETT
- Received 2 year old 5 cuffed tube
- Both had significant stridor on extubation with
use of raecemic epi, dexamethasone, heliox - The 4 year old needed emergent re-intubation in
the OR severe sub-glottic stenosis could pass a
4 uncuffed tube only -
36International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation
BUT THE CUFF WAS NOT THE PROBLEM.
- Cuffed tracheal tubes are as safe as uncuffed
tubes for infants (except newborns) and children
if rescuers use the correct tube size and cuff
inflation pressure and verify tube position.
Under certain circumstances (e.g., poor lung
compliance, high airway resistance, and large
glottic air leak), cuffed tracheal tubes may be
preferable. The International Liaison Committee
on Resuscitation (ILCOR) Consensus on Science
with Treatment Recommendations for Pediatric and
Neonatal Patients Pediatric Basic and Advanced
Life Support
37Pros of cuffed tubes
- The presence of a leak is not a reliable
indicator that there is no undue pressure from
the tube on the cricoid mucosa - The contours of the airway and of the tube are
different. - Using a cuffed tube would permit the use of a
smaller tube, reducing the dangers of pressure
damage at the laryngeal inlet and cricoid. - The presence of a cuff may ease tube tip away
from anterior tracheal wall reducing the
incidence of tube tip damage. - Cuffed ETTs protect better against aspiration
than an uncuffed ETT.
38Cuffed Tube Safety
- For the safe use of the cuffed tracheal tube, the
following rules should be respected - On Broselow, ½ size down if cuffed tube
- An air leak to be present after intubation at
20 cm H2O airway pressure with the cuff not
inflated. - Feeling cuff not adequate method to check
inflation - Check with a manometer
- Should use bags with inbuilt manometer AND PEEP
39Literature
- Use of the LMA is included in
- The guidelines for cardiopulmonary resuscitation
ACLS/PALS - NRP
- Difficult Airway Algorithm
40Advantages to use
- Speed and ease of placement
- Avoidance of endo-bronchial and/or esophageal
intubation - Regurgitation and gastric distention is less
likely - Avoidance of sympathetic response to DL
- Does not require head/neck/jaw manipulation
- Minimal training required
41Disadvantages
- Failure to protect from aspiration
- Inability to provide high-pressure seal
- Unable to ventilate poorly compliant lungs
- Difficult to suction the airway
- Cannot reliably administer intra-tracheal
medications - Additional training and
- skill maintenance
42Approximately 650,000 children evaluated in ED
each year for head trauma with 475, 000 confirmed
TBIs in children lt 15 yrs. Greater than 2000
children die from TBI and 42,000 require
hospitalization.
43Primary brain injury at time of impact. 50 of
those that die with TBI do so within the first 2
hrs.
44Secondary brain injury evolving over the next few
minutes, hours days, resulting in disability
mortality. POST INJURY HYPOTENSION AND HYPOXIA
BELIEVED TO INDUCE SECONDARY BRAIN INJURY ARE
ASSOCIATED WITH INCREASED MORBIDITY MORTALITY
45Hypotension Findings 2008 Study
- 31 not monitored for Hypotension
- Most often occurred during scene EMS time
- In children w/o documented hypotension, those not
fully monitored had a Relative Risk of
in-hospital death of 4.5 compared to those fully
monitored - Hypotension documented in 39 of children
- Least likely to be treated at the scene (only
treated 12 of time at scene) more likely to be
treated on arrival to hospital - Children not fully monitored younger smaller
46- ABSENCE OF BLOOD PRESSURE MONITORING WAS
ASSOCIATED WITH YOUNG AGE, INCREASED SEVERITY OF
ILLNESS POOR OUTCOME
47HYPOXIA
- 34 of children not monitored for O2 sat or apnea
during portion of their early care - Hypoxia or apnea documented in 44 of children in
the study - Hypoxia/apnea also occurred most often at scene
- EMS personnel treated noticed hypoxia or apnea
87. Air-medical ED treated 100
48Hypoxia
- Children with hypoxia were significantly younger
smaller than children without documented
hypoxia. - I dont need numbers, I go by the LOC
- Problem.
- Those not monitored had lower median GCS scores
than children who were fully monitored.
49Take Home Message on TBI Monitoring
- Study showed that early hypotension and
hypoxia/apnea are common events in pediatric TBI
and are strongly associated with worse outcomes - QA Opportunity Chart/Systems Reviews
- BP documented in specified time period
- If not why not?
- Saturation documented within specified time
period - Appropriate Interventions?
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52References
- Agarwal, Swanson, Murphy, Yaeger, Sharek,
Halamek, (2005). Comparing the utility of a
standard pediatric resuscitation cart with a
pediatric resuscitation cart based on the
Broselow tape a randomized, controlled,
crossover trial involving simulated resuscitation
scenarios. Pediatrics. 116 (3) e326-33 - Cox, R.G. (2005). Should cuffed endotracheal
tubes be used routinely in children? Canadian
Journal of Anesthesia, 52(7), 669-674 - Felten, M.L., Schmautz, E., Delaporte-Cerceau,
S., Orliaguet, G.A., Carli, P.A. (2003).
Endotracheal tube cuff pressure is unpredictable
in children. Anesthesia Analgesia, 97,
1612-1616. - Hohenhaus SM, Frush KS. Pediatric patient safety
common problems in the use of resuscitative aids
for simplifying pediatric emergency care. J Emerg
Nurs 2004 3049-51. - Hohenhaus S. Assessing competency the
Broselow-Luten resuscitation tape. J Emerg Nurs
2002 2870-2. - Golden, S. (2005). Cuffed vs. uncuffed
endotracheal tubes in children a review. Society
for Pediatric Anesthesia, Winter 2005, 10.
53- James, I. (2001). Cuffed tubes in children.
Paediatric Anaesthesia, 11, 259-263. - Neonatal hypoglycemia initial and follow-up
management. National Guideline Clearinghouse
www.guideline.gov - Wagner, C., Mazurek, P. (2006). Current Practices
in Pediatric Immobilization- An Editorial. Air
Medical Journal , 25 (4) 144-148 - Weeks, D., Molsberry, D. (2008). Pediatric
advanced life support re-training by
videoconferencing compared to face-to-face
instruction A planned non-inferiority trial.
Resuscitation, 79 p 109-117 - Zebrack, M., Dandoy, C., Hansen, K., Scaife, E.,
Clay Mann, N., Bratton, S. (2009). Pediatrics,
124 56-64