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WELCOME TO THE PICU.

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Presentation on theme: "WELCOME TO THE PICU."— Presentation transcript:

1 WELCOME TO THE PICU

2 Flow Of The Day Before 8am: 8:00 - 8:30am: 8:30 - 9:00am: 9:00 - 9:30am: 9: :00 am: 11: :00pm: Pre-Round/Receive sign out Morning report or PICU fellow lecture (Mo/Th)…MANDATORY Rounds begin Radiology rounds Completion of morning rounds Work time/didactics/first post-op admits

3 Flow of the Day 12:00 – 1:00pm Noon Conference 1:00 – 4:30pm Follow up consultations, procedures, post-op admits, didactics 4:00 – 4:30pm Residents receive NP sign out 4:30 – Resident/fellow sit down sign out, followed by night team only walk rounds

4 Resident Teaching Conferences
PICU resident lectures: Monday / Thursday 8 – 8:30am In place of morning report At front desk in PICU Mandatory lectures Confirm this

5 Other Teaching Conferences
Monday 12-1 PM PICU Divisional Conference 2E PICU Conference Room Tuesday 7:30 AM CVICU lecture Thursday PICU Resident small group conferences (palliative care x2, vent teaching with RT, code team/cart teaching) TBD each week, s sent from pediatric chiefs Friday CVICU Conference with Dr. Hanley Confirm edit--

6 Educational Resources
PICU resident handbook with relevant PICU topics is available at Hard copy is available in the resident call room.

7 PICU chapters at http://peds. stanford
Monitors in ICU Vascular Access Codes ICP management Status Epilepticus Sedation Pediatric Airway Airway Management Mechanical Ventilation ARDS Status Asthmaticus Inotropes Shock Sepsis Meningococcus Informational—not discussion

8 PICU chapters at http://peds. stanford
Cardiomyopathy Liver Failure Acute Renal Falilure Fluids, Electrolytes, Nutrition Oncology Transfusions DKA Submersion Injuries Brain Death End of life issues

9 PICU Tables at http://peds. stanford
Sedation Inotropes Shock same

10 2 Teams in PICU Team A Team B Attending Fellow
Senior pediatric resident Pediatric intern ED resident Nurse practitioner Slightly different now due to night float system

11 Resident Role Receive sign out from overnight resident
Pre-round on PICU patients Present patients at morning rounds beginning promptly at 8:30am After rounds carry out developed plan for each patient: e.g. call consults, follow up on radiologic studies, etc. Discuss any management changes of patients with the attending / fellow prior to carrying out changes Seems obvious

12 Resident Role Be actively involved in stabilization of acutely ill patients Evaluate new admissions to the ICU and develop a management plan Present new admissions to the ICU fellow / attending Sign out and transfer care of patients to overnight resident Attend teaching conferences conducted by the ICU attendings / fellows Again seems obvious…

13 Other Trainees in PICU Anesthesia fellows Emergency medicine residents
Medical Students

14 Anesthesia Fellows Present for half the blocks
Primarily provide support for fellow level activities in the ICU Will not primarily follow patients

15 ED Residents Will act as a 7th resident in the PICU
May care for equal number of patients as pediatric residents Rounds one day on weekend, typically Saturday Excused for Wednesday AM ED conferences: must pre-round & hand over notes to on call resident prior to leaving for education rounds Starting this academic year, ED residents will be complete 3 weeks of days and one week of nights

16 Medical Students Primarily 2 rotations in PICU
Critical care core clerkship – all patients followed by students on this rotation must be co-followed by residents (most students on this rotation) Sub-internship – these students can follow their own patients Resident needs to write progress note

17 PICU NPs Michelle Burns-James Krysta Nicholson Karley Mariano
Work independently and carry their own patients They are present in PICU 4 days/week for 10 hour shifts (variable days and starting times…i.e. may work noon-10pm some day depending on staffing needs) Typically round one day on weekends, alternating with ED resident

18 PICU Evaluations for Pediatric Residents
Faculty evaluations completed on Med-Hub Verbal feedback from attendings while on the rotation – Be sure to elicit feedback if not provided

19 Notes The following need a full H&P:
Trauma (even if went to OR first) Transport ED admits Direct admit from outside The following need an accept note: Post-op surgical Transfer from floor/ rapid response

20 Notes Each patient needs PICU daily progress note (unless admitted in early am) Significant events: codes/procedure/intervention Require a note: confer with fellow or attending who may do this note Templates exist for most procedures Interim summary weekly on Thursday for any patient with LOS > 5d in PICU

21 Notes Online PICU specific templates Systems-based note
Indicate attending on your team and select “sign” not “review” Please remember to update physical exam daily

22 TIPS for PICU Notes These are the official legal medical record
They support level of care provided Therefore: Avoid colloquials or not universally understood abbreviations Use words to support ICU care— instead of dehydration—mild tachycardia but stable, CR monitor Try: dehydration with tachycardia, compensated shock in ICU for continuous hemodynamic monitoring

23 ICU Transfers Requirements
Approval of the ICU Attending Transfer summary If going to a resident team, usually non-surgical and ICU stay >48h Transfer orders Surgical patients: surgeons often write orders Always clarify with surgeon if OK to transfer & WHO will write transfer order Sign patient out to ward resident FACE to FACE in the PICU

24 PICU-to-Floor Hand-offs
Goals: Safe patient sign out Issue: Sign-out often does not happen close to transfer time due to bed availability Issue: No “stops” within the system to prevent transfer when hand-offs not completed.

25 PICU-to-Medical Team Hand-offs (including Renal transplant patients)
Floor Resource Nurse/USA Floor MD orders “Okay to transfer” Floor Bedside RN Floor MD PICU MD orders “transfer bed request” PICU RN requests bed in Tele Trekking USA or Spectralink alerts Floor Resource Nurse that bed ready in Tele Trekking Floor MD calls PICU and goes to PICU for sign-out Patient Transfers to Floor* Phone sign-out PICU Resource Nurse PICU Bedside RN PICU MD

26 PICU to Floor Hand-offs: MD Roles
1. PICU resident orders “Transfer Bed Request” including accepting team and orders “Change of Care to Acute care” and prints out PICU to Acute care IPASS report 2. Floor Resource Nurse or USA will call Accepting Floor Resident when PICU patient has been assigned a bed through Tele Trekking. 3. Accepting Floor Resident will call asking to talk to fellow to arrange time to get face to face sign-out, ideally within 30 minutes. 4. Accepting Floor Resident (and ideally fellow and attending) goes down to PICU for verbal sign-out. 5. Accepting Floor Resident puts in “Okay to Transfer” order. 6. Prior to sending patient or accepting patient PICU Bedside Nurse and Floor Bedside Nurse verify “Okay to Transfer” order has been placed 7. Patient comes to floor.

27 Please use the printed tool: Floor residents should print out but you can also

28 Printed Tool: Where to Find

29 Printed Tool

30 Rounding & Presenting Patients

31 Flow of Rounds 8:30 Typically BMT, Liver, Renal Transplant
Followed by: Sick/high acuity Transfers Remainder Neurosurgeons typically round on their patients between 7:30-8:30

32 Tips for Success on Rounds
See CXR if available before rounds start…ETT high/low, new findings that can’t wait for rounds to start? Any special drains in place? JP, Chest tube, EVD…know how much output total & per shift Any pending studies completed from prior day? EEG, MRI, US, ECHO, cultures ….know the result

33 Patient identification
Quick assessment: i.e. patient improving, worsening, or unchanged Major (not all) interval events Vitals: Tmax (time) , vital sign ranges, including CVP, ICP if applicable

34 Completing patient presentation
Be succinct; try not to present same data more than once One line overall assessment of patient condition Review orders Address patient rounding checklist on every patient Engage Bedside RN in rounds!!

35 Procedures PICU fellows are given priority for all procedures (particularly 1st year fellows) Prerequisite for CCM training Acute situations : fellow or attending

36 Procedures Procedures residents should acquire some degree of comfort with while in the PICU Bag-mask ventilation Operating an anesthesia bag Placement of peripheral IVs Chest compression/Defibrillator familiarity Code cart familiarity

37 Bedside Nurses COMMUNICATION
Tell bedside nurse you are the resident caring for that patient Give them your pager #

38 Bedside Nurses Communicate all orders to the bedside nurse after written Minimizes confusion about orders Provides high level consistent patient care Improves patient safety Every nurse also has an Ascom phone if you can’t make it to bedside

39 Bedside Nurses The bedside RN = your eyes & ears to your patient
Provide “real time” clinical information If they know what you are looking for – they can tell you - Especially with sick patients **They can make you look good by keeping you updated on all pertinent info! **

40 Orders To minimize line entry RNs like to have flexibility to time meds UNLESS You want drug given at a specific time Qday ordered at 8pm won’t happen until 8 am next day RNs may batch labs to minimize line entry *** except for immunosupression drugs *** e.g. Prograf, CSA

41 Order Entry Most routine labs and CXR require daily orders:
CBC Coags Chemistries CXR Qam labs in PICU are drawn at 4 or 5 am TIP: Use PICU Daily Orderset during rounds!!

42 Admitting Trauma Patients
ANY TRAUMA patient—admit as follows: LOCATION: 2E/PICU Ward Attending: select PICU Attdg Service: Select Trauma (even if head trauma) Sub-specialty attending: Select Trauma or Neurosurgery Attending If head trauma or NAT: Peds surgery/trauma must be notified to do tertiary survey Trauma H&P in Epic, Trauma service should write admit orders Surgical service should write the discharge summary unless transferred to PICU service for ongoing medical issues

43

44 Order Entry Reminders Extubation: Requires an extubation order
Don’t just D/C vent order Other important orders are linked to extubation Blood product orders Still require a call slip Inform patient’s RN that products ordered ACE(airway clearance evaluation) Allows some autonomy to RT to develop plan for best mode of therapy

45 Discharges Patient rounding checklist useful tool!
Prescription paper available from USA; please send 24 hours before Loads into one printer and special tray Select the PICU prescription printer for all D/C scripts Rx_picu_fntdsk

46 Discharge During rounds if discharge is anticipated in the next 48 hours please update the target discharge date When you get admissions from surgery please ask about when they are anticipating discharge and what clinical criteria will need to be met. If discharge is anticipated use the discharge checklist to help aid in the planning process (it will be on the patient door) After you discharge a patient there is a survey that we are asking you to complete regarding your experience with the process

47 PICU Quality and Safety
PICU Handoff Initiative for ALL OR, 1N Handoffs One Message, One Time Role cards utilized IPASS tool for handoff comes with 45 min call

48 PICU Quality and Safety
PICU Rounding Checklist Real time clinical decision support Enhance patient safety and care coordination Review at conclusion of rounds for EACH patient

49 COWS Be sure to sign off Don’t leave patient information exposed
Plug them back in (a dying cow is not pretty)

50 PICU Etiquette Please speak in quiet voices, particularly around main nurses station We follow HUSH (healthcare workers utilizing silence for healing) in the PICU Please no open food or drink containers unless in specified areas Make sure you do follow the appropriate hand hygiene and have bare hands at all time in the unit

51 Final Thoughts Take ownership of your patients Be present Be involved
Ask questions Suggestions on improving the rotation

52 Questions, concerns, thoughts on the rotation
Contact PICU rotation director - Dr. Courtenay Barlow at Pager:


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