Abstract

Background Endotracheal intubation in paediatric emergency medicine is a relatively infrequent event with a significant complication rate. Strong evidence exists for the use of checklists around emergency intubations to improve safety. This QI project took place in a dedicated Children’s Emergency Department (CED), seeing 33 000 presentations a year. Our institution takes part in the National Emergency Airway Registry for Children (NEAR4KIDS), an international, multi-centre advanced airway registry and quality improvement initiative. Measures such as number of attempts to successful advanced airway placement, saturation changes during RSI and tracheal intubation-associated adverse events are being used to regularly evaluate airway management within each participating institution. Out-of-theatre endotracheal intubation data has been captured since March 2013. Previously, we successfully increased inconsistent end-tidal CO2 use to almost 100% after a quality improvement push based on NEAR4KIDS data. No intubation checklist was used at our institution until December 2014, when an Emergency Intubation Checklist was implemented in our Paediatric Intensive Care Unit (PICU) and CED. It was deemed important to create a hospital-wide checklist. This would promote team coherence for CED emergency intubations, when often both PICU and CED staff are involved. PICU sees around 150 intubations annually; CED intubates around 25 children a year. The team members’ familiarity with advanced airway management is therefore potentially very different. Method We decided on a step-wise, simulation-based checklist development and implementation. Step 1 involved identifying key checklist elements, using other intubation checklists and expert opinions from within our institution and externally. Step 2 involved developing a checklist of essential actions and tasks based on the roles of the airway team members. Step 3 involved running low-fidelity simulated scenarios using the checklist with the CED Nurse Educators. Step 4 consisted of medium-fidelity simulation training for CED junior doctors. We amended the checklist based on feedback given by the Nurse Educators and CED doctors. Step 3 and 4 elucidated the need for a tool to speed up and aid preparation for intubation prior to completing the checklist. A solution was found in creating role-specific action cards for airway team members: event manager, airway doctor, airway assistant, medication nurse, circulation nurse. These are laminated A5 size cards, stating a role and its actions required to prepare for intubation. Step 5 involved introduction of the intubation quality improvement package to all CED staff, using a variety of simulated scenarios aimed at each level of nursing and medical staff involved in advanced airway management. The final step is assessment of the QI tool’s effect on patient care, with adaptations actioned as needed. Results Introduction of this quality improvement package has been well received. Team member feedback (both nursing and medical) was uniformly positive. The cards aided role allocation, allowed speedier preparation for intubation and promoted role flexibility. The effects on patient outcome are measured as part of the Near 4 kids airway collaboration. We anticipate being able to report some simulation based results over the next 3 months. Conclusion A shared checklist for PICU and ED appears to be helpful. Involvement of all levels of medical and nursing staff in the development of this quality improvement tool ensured buy-in. Simulation-based introduction of an intubation checklist in a low-volume setting such as a paediatric emergency department allows timely implementation. Action cards are an excellent way to teach and reinforce checklist-related roles. Effect on patient outcomes will be reported in the near future.

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