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Critical Care Rapid Response Team (CCRT) Information sheet Referred to as ACCESS (Acute Critical Care Emergency Support Service) at MSH Mount Sinai Site Lead: Dr. Stephen Lapinsky Contact: x3211; [email protected] Nursing Site Lead: Nurse Unit Administrator Contact x2610 Background: - CCRT is also known as “Medical Emergency Teams” (MET) - Team comprises of a specially trained Critical Care nurse with a fellow and/or attending physician in support - Responds to deteriorating patients on the wards with the aim of o Early intervention to avoid ICU requirement o Early referral and transfer to ICU o Education and support of ward staff o End-of-life discussion where appropriate - Used in Australia and England for more than 5 years - Piloted program at UHN, Oakville and Ottawa - MOHLTC now funding implementation in 22 hospitals province-wide - Expected outcomes: o Reduction in-patient arrests o Reduction in ward mortality o Reduction in the ICU length of stay o Improved accessibility and utilization of ICU resources CCRT is NOT: - A replacement for the Cardiac Arrest Team A substitute for an ICU consult A substitute for medical consults Calling Criteria: may be called by medical, nursing, respiratory and paramedical staff A- Airway concerns B- Respiratory rate <8, >30, SaO2 <90% on >50% oxygen C- Systolic BP <90, >200, HR <40, >30 D- Decrease LOC O- Other serious concerns, decreased urine output Implementation November 2006- January 2006: Initiation Period Weekdays 0800-1600 coverage February 2007 onwards: Full implementation 24-hour coverage, 7 days a week Mount Sinai Hospital Access Team ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ Ministry funded initiative in response to Safer Act Now Team is made up of ICU nurses, RTs and MDs Consult can be initiated by a RN, RT or Team physicians/housestaff When RN/RT call the ACCESS TEAM, they must let the medical team aware ASAP ¾ Consults can be done from urgent situations like: -decreased LOC; hypotension -suspected sepsis -hypoxia -other urgent situations ¾ The individual who responds to the call or consults will make a quick assessment, and take care of urgent issues i.e. assess airway, breathing, circulation, reads chart, assess labs, DI and confers with the ICU physician on call- decide where the most appropriate place for the patient to be- ??? ICU, MSDU, or remain on the ward ¾ Individual will then help organize required care, immediate investigations, immediate treatment, urgent transfer required ¾ Attending medical team must always be involved in management decisions ¾ Team also provides outreach visit to patients who are recently discharged from the ICU ¾ Part of the role of the ACCESS Team is to provide education for the units in dealing with urgent situations ¾ Remember: Access Team does not replace calling CODE BLUE. If a patient is having a cardiac or respiratory arrest, or the patient is in severe distress or airway is compromised, CODE BLUE MUST BE ACTVATED BY THE STAFF ACCESS Consult 1. Primary Assessment • • • • Airway: upper airway obstruction, stridor, secretions Rx: oral/nasal airway, jaw thrust, suction • Breathing: rate & effort, accessory muscles, SpO2 Rx: oxygen, nebulizer, bag-mask • Circulation: cyanosis, HR, BP, perfusion Rx: IV access, fluid bolus, atropine, phenylephrine Triage: Category A, B, C Is this a code? Is this an ICU consult? – need for intubation/inotropes 2. Further Information • • • • • initiate monitoring underlying disease/admission diagnosis current episode – what happened? review current medications laboratory results and radiology if relevant 3. Reassess - diagnoses & interventions to consider RESPIRATORY: COPD/asthma - nebulized Combivent Pulmonary edema - Lasix Consider CXR, ABG CARDIAC: Hypotension - bolus N/S 500 ml in 30 min Bradycardia: atropine Tachycardia: Rx hypotension, pain Chest pain: ASA, nitro, ECG SEPSIS: Fluid bolus, culture NEURO: Decreased LOC: check glucose, D50W, ABG Stroke: urgent Neuro opinion 4. Communicate: ACCESS physician, ward team