Download Wrong mg/kg dose for route Cognitive error Drug Dosing Cards?

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Harm reduction wikipedia , lookup

Adherence (medicine) wikipedia , lookup

Epidemiology wikipedia , lookup

Pharmacognosy wikipedia , lookup

Patient safety wikipedia , lookup

Theralizumab wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
Plan Ahead – Minimizing the Risk
of Pediatric Medication Errors
Implications for Disaster Medicine
William Fales, MD, FACEP
Michigan State University Kalamazoo Center for Medical Studies
5th District Medical Response Coalition
Kalamazoo County Medical Control Authority
S
Acknowledgment
Funding for the MI PEEDS Study was provided by the:
US Department of Health and Human Services
Health Resources and Services Administration
Bureau of Maternal and Child Health
EMS for Children Program
Disclosures
Nothing to Disclose
Kids in Disasters
S
Fortunately
Also, Fortunately
Fundamental Disaster
Medicine Concepts
S Effective response to an MCI involves application of basic and
advanced skills and critical clinical decision making with
limited resources.
S Being able to respond to day-to-day incidents improves (but
does not guarantee) your ability to respond to the “big ones”.
S Corollary: If you can’t handle the “little ones” effectively, you
sure won’t be able to handle the “big ones”.
Pediatric Medication
Errors
S
Medication Challenges in EMS
(A Tail of 4 Michigan Studies)
S Hoyle Study: EMS Med Dosing Errors in
Peds
S Lammers Study: Root Cause Analysis of
Errors in Simulated Peds Emergency
S Michigan EMS Information System Peds
Seizure Study
S RAMPART Study
Med Dosing Errors in Peds
Treated by EMS
S Prehospital Emergency
Care
S Hoyle, et al
S January/March 2012
S Retrospective review of
MERMaID Records
S Jan 1, 2004 to March
31, 2006
S Correct Dose = +/- 20%
of protocol dose
Weight vs. Age
Age Distribution
Incorrect Medication Doses,
Overdoses and Underdoses
Conclusion
Medications delivered to children in the
prehospital setting by paramedics were
frequently administered at doses outside
of the proper range when compared
with documented patient weights. EMS
systems should develop strategies to
reduce pediatric medication dosing
errors.
MI PEEDS
Study
S MI Pediatric Excellence
and Error Detection with
Simulation Study
S EMS-C Targeted Issues Grant
S Academic Emergency
Medicine
S Lammers, et al
S January 2012
Participating Agencies
Mobile Pediatric
Simulation Unit
Seizing Infant
Benzo Dosing (N=45)
Drug
Drug Administration
Administration
Drug Administration
Administration
Drug
Diazepam
Needle
end
Plunger direction
Needle
end
Toddler with Anaphylactic
Shock
S Epinephrine 1:1000 IM/SQ
S Correct dose in 15 of 57 cases (26%)
S 14 of 57 (25%) gave >10x protocol dose
S 9 of 57 (16%) gave IV Epi (4 pushing 1:1000)
S 3 of 5 agencies carried 30 mg multi-dose vials (1:1000)
S Diphenhydramine IV/IO/IM
S Correct dose in 7 of 54 cases (7%)
S Solumedrol IV/IO
S Only attempted by 3 of 60 crews (5%)
S None with correct dose.
MI-EMSIS Peds Seizure Study
S Retrospective review of Michigan EMS
Information System
S 2010 Statewide data
S 944,415 EMS records (all ages)
S 9,168 Under 2 years old (~1%)
S 63 received a benzodiazepines (<7%) for
seizure
Benzo Dosing
Midazolam (N=28)
Diazepam (N=35)
S IV/IO
S 2 of 8 (25%) Correct Dose
S IV/IO
S 2 of 6 (33%) Correct Dose
S IM
S 3 of 11 (27%) Correct Dose
S Rectal
S 5 of 13 (38%) Correct
S Rectal
S 5 (18%) (wrong route)
S Active Error Rate=79%
Dose
S IM (wrong route)
S 1 patient
S Active Error Rate=65%
Summary of Studies
S Hoyle Study: 23% to 100% dosing error rate
S MI PEEDS Study: 25% to 93% dosing error rate
S MI EMSIS Study: 62% to 75% dosing error rate
S Studies limited to EMS (high performance EMS)
S Do other health professionals do better?
Implications in Disaster
Medicine
S Higher than usual level of emotional stress
S Emergency personnel task overloaded
S Use of non-emergency personnel for augmentation
S e.g., Ortho nurse pulled to ED
S Need for highly potent meds with significant risks
S Analgesics, sedatives, neuromuscular blockers, ACLS meds
S Use of alternative, unfamiliar meds
S Unknown pediatric patient weights
Plan Ahead – Minimizing Risk
of Pediatric Medication Errors
S People
S Practice and Practices
S Protocols
S Paraphernalia
People
S Training and Education
S Increased use of existing standardized
courses (PALS/PEPP)
S Increased emphasis on safe med administration
S More frequent, brief continuing education
sessions
S 60 minutes twice a year vs. 4 hours every 2 years
S Simulation-based training
S High intensity, small group
S Does not require high-fidelity simulators
Knowledge Assessment
Q. “What is the dose of Benadryl
for an 8 kg infant who is in
anaphylaxis?”
A. 1 mg/kg IM or IV
Performance-Based
Assessment
Q. “This simulated infant is in
anaphylaxis and has received
epinephrine. An IV line is in
place. Give another drug.”
Performance-Based
Assessment
Answer:
1. Recall “Benadryl.”
2. Recall or look up the dose: 1 mg/kg IV.
3. Calculate the dose in mgs:
1 mg/kg x 8 kg = 8 mg
4. Find the concentration on the bottle.
5. Convert a weight dose to a volume dose.
8 mg
50 mg/mL
= 0.16 mL
6. Draw 0.16 mL out of the vial
with a 1 mL syringe.
7. Find the closest port on the IV line.
8. Attach the syringe without
contaminating the line.
9. Clamp the line upstream.
10. Deliver the entire volume.
Practice and Practices
S Practice (Exercising)
S Include peds in EMS and hospital exercises
S Require simulated med administration
S Use wireless ped simulators
S Practices
S Mandatory buddy-check for all pediatric med
administration
S Requires culture change
S Challenges with single paramedic crews
S No fault med error reporting systems
S Provide info on near misses/hits >>>> Safety solutions
Protocols
S Greatly simplify dosing protocols
S Avoid non-whole numbers
S Broad, simple doses
S Epi-Pen vs. Epi-Pen Jr.
S Use single doses when appropriate
S Glucagon IM for hypoglycemia
S Can this be done safely?
RAMPART Study
 Rapid Anticonvulsant Medications
Prior to Arrival Trial
 New England Journal of Medicine
 Silbergliet, et al
 Feb 16, 2012
 Multi-Center Randomized Trial
 Including Detroit EMS
 Compare
 Midazolam 10 mg IM
 (13-40 kg 5 mg IM)
 Lorazepam 4 mg IV
 (13-40 kg 2 mg IV)
RAMPART Findings
S
Conclusion: For subjects in status epilepticus,
intramuscular midazolam is at least as safe and
effective as intravenous lorazepam for
prehospital seizure cessation.
Paraphernalia
S Autoinjectors
S Limited availability (Epi Pen, AtroPen,
Glucagon +/-)
S Broselow® Pediatric Emergency Tape
S Limitations
S Pediatric Dosing Cards
S Under development
Thematic
Thematic Qualitative
Qualitative Assessment
Assessment
Equipment:
Use of Broselow tape for weight estimate:
Cognitive
error
Procedure
error
Procedure
error
Wrong
Weight
Cognitive
error
Cognitive
error
Thematic
Thematic Qualitative
Qualitative Assessment
Assessment
Cognitive
Cognitive error
and/or
procedure
error
Cognitive
error
Teamwork
error
Drug Delivery:
Drug
Dose
Error
Cognitive Cognitive
error
error
Affective
error
Drug
Dosing
Cards?
Procedure
error
LA County Peds Cards
MI Peds Card (Prototype)
6-7 Kg6-7 (13-15 Lbs)/ 3-6 Months
(Pink)
Resuscitation Medication
Dose
Volume
EPINEPHRINE 1:10,000 (1mg/10mL prefill)
.07 mg
0.7 ml
AMIODARONE (150mg/3mL)
25 mg
0.5 ml
LIDOCAINE (100mg/5mL)
5 mg
0.25 ml
MAGNESIUM SULFATE (1gm/2mL)
250 mg
0.5 ml
CALCIUM CHLORIDE (1gm/10mL)
100 mg
1 ml
ADENOSINE (6mg/2mL) – 1st Dose
.65 mg
0.2 ml
ADENOSINE (6mg/2mL) – 2nd Dose
1.3 mg
0.4 ml
Electrical Therapy
Initial
Repeat
Defibrillation
15 J
25 J
Cardioversion (synchronized)
10 J
15 J
MI Peds Card (Prototype)
6-7 Kg (13-15 Lbs)/ 3-6 Months
(Pink)
Assessment
Asthma
Anaphylaxis
Seizure
Normal Vitals: HR: 100-160, RR: 30-60, SBP: >70,
Development: Rolls from front to back, back to side. Carries object to mouth
Drug
Dose
Volume
Drug
Dose
Volume
Albuterol (2.5 mg/3 ml)
2.5 mg
3 ml
Epinephrine (1 mg/ml) IM
0.1 mg
0.1 ml
Diphenhydramine (50 mg/ml)
10 mg
0.2 ml
Solumedrol (125 mg/2 ml)
19 mg
0.3 ml
Midazolam IM (5 mg/1 ml)
1 mg
0.2 ml
Diazepam PR (10 mg/2 ml)
3 mg
0.6 ml
Midazolam IV slow (5 mg/1 ml+4
.5 mg
1 ml
(diluted)
Diazepam IV slow (10 mg/2 ml +
1 mg
1 ml
(diluted)
1 mg
1 ml
0.5 mg
.5 ml
(diluted)
ml NSS=1 mg/ml))
Hypoglycemia
Dextrose 25% Slow IV
Pain Control
Fentanyl IV (100 mcg/2 ml)
5 mcg
8 ml NSS=1 mg/ml)
15 ml
Glucagon IM (1 mg/ml)
0.1 ml
Morphine IV (10 mg/ml +
9 ml
NSS=10mg/10 ml)
Fentanyl IN(100 mcg/ml)
10 mcg
.2 ml
Morphine IM (10 mg/ml)
1 mg
0.1 ml
1 mg
1 ml
Naloxone IN (2 mg/2 ml)
1 mg
1 ml
130 ml
130 ml
130 ml
130 ml
Narcotic OD
Naloxone IV/IM (2 mg/2 ml)
Fluid Bolus
Normal Saline IV/IO
Equipment
OPA: 50mm, NPA: 14F, BVM: Infant, Laryngoscope: 1 (straight), ET Tube: 3.5, ET Depth: 11 cm
May repeat NSS x2 PRN
Summary
S Caring for critically ill and injured kids is extremely stressful
S Disasters greatly increase stress
S Pediatric medication errors are common
S During a disaster med errors could significantly increase
S There are many ways to potentially reduce ped med errors
S By reducing pediatric medication errors on a “routine”
basis, we will provide safer, more effective care in a
disaster
Thanks! [email protected]