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Pediatric emergency care · Apr 2007
Guidelines to practice: the process of planning and implementing a pediatric sedation program.
- Savithiri Ratnapalan and Suzan Schneeweiss.
- Division of Emergency Medicine, The Hospital for Sick Children, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. savithiri.ratnapalan@sickkids.ca
- Pediatr Emerg Care. 2007 Apr 1;23(4):262-6.
ObjectivePediatric sedation practices vary among institutions and even within the same institution depending on providers and location. We planned to implement a pediatric procedural sedation program for a tertiary care pediatric emergency department to standardize sedation practices among emergency physicians.MethodsAn interactive contextual planning model was adapted, and several tasks were initiated simultaneously. The director of pediatric emergency medicine and clinical director of the institution approved the proposal for the sedation program. Needs assessment surveys and focus group interviews were conducted to identify educational needs of the target audience and infuse a sense of ownership. A grant was obtained from the institution because the budget exceeded available divisional funds. Other pediatric sedation guidelines and published literature were used to produce a sedation handbook and pocket card. Interim approval was obtained from the Drugs and Therapeutics Committee and the Patient Care Committee.ResultsThe program was successfully implemented after all physicians and nurses working in the emergency department attended a half-day sedation course and completed a multiple-choice examination. Random chart audits verify that the emergency physicians are performing almost all procedural sedations now as per protocol.ConclusionsImplementing a structured program facilitates guideline adherence. Adapting a flexible contextual planning model was successful in translating guidelines to practice where resources were limited, and the target audience was highly trained adult learners.
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