Sou Vanno, McManus Craig, Mifflin Nicholas, Frost Steven A, Ale Julie, Alexandrou Evan
Liverpool Hospital, Liverpool, Australia.
Western Sydney University, Building EB, Ground Level Room 44, Parramatta South Campus, Locked Bag 1797, Penrith South. DC 1797, NSW 2751 Australia.
BMC Nurs. 2017 Nov 17;16:64. doi: 10.1186/s12912-017-0261-z. eCollection 2017.
Many patients are admitted to hospital with non-visible or palpable veins, often resulting in multiple painful attempts at cannulation, anxiety and catheter failure. We developed a difficult intravenous pathway at our institution to reduce the burden of difficult access for patients by increasing first attempt success with ultrasound guidance. The emphasis was to provide a solution for hospitalised patients after business hours by training the after-hours clinical support team in ultrasound guided cannulation.
Inception cohort study of patients referred to the after-hours clinical support team including outcomes such as number of attempts at cannulation before and after referral, insertion site, type of device inserted and recorded pain score for attempts prior to referral and for attempts by the after-hours clinical support team.
Between January and December 2016, 379 patients were referred to the after-hours clinical support team for placement of a peripheral intravenous catheter under ultrasound guidance. The median number of unsuccessful attempts before referral was 2 (IQR 2, 4), this ranged between 1 attempt to 10 attempts compared to only 1 attempt (IQR 1, 1, < 0.001) with no more than 2 attempts in total by the after-hours clinical support team. The first time success rate by the after-hours clinical support team was 93% ( = 348). The median pain score for attempts with ultrasound use was 2/10 (IQR 1-3) compared to 7/10 (IQR 5-9) for previous attempts without ultrasound ( < 0.001).
The use of ultrasound guidance for peripheral intravenous catheter insertion by the after-hours clinical support team for patients with difficult venous access has been successful at our institution with 9 out of every 10 catheters inserted at first attempt with significantly lower recorded pain scores.
许多患者因静脉不可见或触诊不清而入院,这常常导致多次痛苦的插管尝试、焦虑以及导管插入失败。我们在本机构建立了一条困难静脉通路,通过在超声引导下提高首次尝试成功率来减轻患者困难静脉穿刺的负担。重点是通过对非工作时间临床支持团队进行超声引导下插管培训,为非工作时间住院的患者提供解决方案。
对转诊至非工作时间临床支持团队的患者进行队列研究,记录转诊前后的插管尝试次数、插入部位、插入装置类型以及转诊前尝试和非工作时间临床支持团队尝试时记录的疼痛评分等结果。
2016年1月至12月期间,379例患者被转诊至非工作时间临床支持团队,在超声引导下放置外周静脉导管。转诊前未成功尝试的中位数为2次(四分位间距2, 4),范围为1次至10次,相比之下,非工作时间临床支持团队总共不超过2次尝试(中位数1次,四分位间距1, 1,<0.001)。非工作时间临床支持团队的首次成功率为93%(n = 348)。使用超声时尝试的疼痛评分中位数为2/10(四分位间距1 - 3),而之前未使用超声时尝试的疼痛评分为7/10(四分位间距5 - 9)(<0.001)。
在我们机构,非工作时间临床支持团队对静脉穿刺困难的患者使用超声引导插入外周静脉导管取得了成功,每10根导管中有9根首次尝试成功,记录的疼痛评分显著更低。