• Am J Health Syst Pharm · Sep 2013

    Effect of a pharmacist on timing of postintubation sedative and analgesic use in trauma resuscitations.

    • Albert Amini, Erynne A Faucett, John M Watt, Richard Amini, John C Sakles, Peter Rhee, Brian L Erstad, and Asad E Patanwala.
    • Department of Surgery, College of Medicine, University of Arizona (UA), Tucson, AZ, USA.
    • Am J Health Syst Pharm. 2013 Sep 1;70(17):1513-7.

    PurposePharmacists' impact in reducing the time interval from intubation to sedative and analgesic use during trauma patient resuscitations is investigated.MethodsA retrospective cohort study was conducted at a level 1 trauma center to compare medication-use outcomes in consecutive cases in which trauma patients underwent rocuronium-assisted rapid-sequence intubation (RSI) and subsequent sedation and analgesia with or without a pharmacist's participation on the resuscitation team. The primary and secondary outcomes were, respectively, the time to sedative provision and the time to analgesic provision after intubation.ResultsRelative to resuscitation cases not involving a pharmacist, the presence of the pharmacist during RSI was associated with decreased mean times to provision of postintubation sedation (9 minutes versus 28 minutes, p = 0.007) and analgesia (21 minutes versus 44 minutes, p = 0.057). The cumulative proportions of patients receiving appropriate sedation 5, 10, and 15 minutes after intubation were 11%, 26%, and 41% in the pharmacist-absent group and 33%, 53%, and 63% in the pharmacist-present group (p = 0.009, 0.008, and 0.045, respectively); for postintubation analgesic use, the corresponding figures were 9%, 14%, and 23% in the pharmacist-absent group and 17%, 30%, and 43% in the pharmacist-present group (p = 0.236, 0.066, and 0.039, respectively).ConclusionThe presence of a pharmacist during RSI procedures was associated with decreased times to postintubation sedative and analgesic use, indicating that pharmacist participation in trauma-resuscitation responses can facilitate appropriate drug therapy.

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