Publication | Closed Access
Developing and Sustaining an Ultrasound-Guided Peripheral Intravenous Access Program for Emergency Nurses
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Citations
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References
2010
Year
Medical UltrasoundThoracic UltrasoundEmergency CarePrimary CareEmergency NursesTelehealthEmergency RadiologyEmergency Department TechniciansAssistive TechnologyMusculoskeletal UltrasoundUltrasonography UseUltrasoundEmergency DepartmentNursingPatient SafetyEmergency Medical ServiceVascular AccessOut-of-hospital Emergency Medical ServiceMedicineEmergency MedicineAnesthesiology
Ultrasonography use in the emergency department (ED) has been well established. The use of ultrasonography that falls into the traditional practice of the emergency nurse is peripheral intravenous (IV) access. Benefits of using ultrasonography for peripheral IV access include decreasing patient throughput, cost reduction, decreasing complications, increased patient and emergency medicine physician satisfaction, and emergency nurse autonomy. Review of the literature demonstrates no discernable differences in ability and efficacy with ultrasound (US)-guided peripheral IV access when comparing data from studies about emergency medicine physicians, certified registered nurses anesthetists, emergency department technicians, physician assistants, and emergency registered nurses. In 2006, Duke University Hospital Emergency Department started a US-Guided Peripheral IV Access program for emergency nurses. Similar patient populations have been observed and the same types of complications have been encountered as described in the literature. Future goals include perfecting nurses' vein selection, and to study skill mastery with US-guided peripheral IV access.
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