Development and Implementation of a Bedside Peripherally Inserted Central Catheter Service in a PICU*

Objectives: To create a bedside peripherally inserted central catheter service to increase placement of bedside peripherally inserted central catheter in PICU patients. Design: Two-phase observational, pre-post design. Setting: Single-center quaternary noncardiac PICU. Patients: All patients admitted to the PICU. Interventions: From June 1, 2015, to May 31, 2017, a bedside peripherally inserted central catheter service team was created (phase I) and expanded (phase II) as part of a quality improvement initiative. A multidisciplinary team developed a PICU peripherally inserted central catheter evaluation tool to identify amenable patients and to suggest location and provider for procedure performance. Outcome, process, and balancing metrics were evaluated. Measurements and Main Results: Bedside peripherally inserted central catheter service placed 130 of 493 peripherally inserted central catheter (26%) resulting in 2,447 hospital central catheter days. A shift in bedside peripherally inserted central catheter centerline proportion occurred during both phases. Median time from order to catheter placement was reduced for peripherally inserted central catheters placed by bedside peripherally inserted central catheter service compared with placement in interventional radiology (6 hr [interquartile range, 2–23 hr] vs 34 hr [interquartile range, 19–61 hr]; p
Source: Pediatric Critical Care Medicine - Category: Pediatrics Tags: Quality and Safety Source Type: research