• Hospital pediatrics · Sep 2015

    Current State of Institutional Privileging Profiles for Pediatric Procedural Sedation Providers.

    • Pradip P Kamat, Gregory A Hollman, Harold K Simon, James D Fortenberry, Courteny E McCracken, and Jana A Stockwell.
    • Department of Pediatrics, Emory University School of Medicine Atlanta, Georgia; Children's Healthcare of Atlanta at Egleston, Atlanta, Georgia; and pradip.kamat@choa.org.
    • Hosp Pediatr. 2015 Sep 1;5(9):487-94.

    Background And ObjectiveProviders from a variety of training backgrounds and specialties provide procedural sedation at institutions in the United States. We sought to better understand the privileging patterns and practices for sedation providers.MethodsSurveys were sent to 56 program directors belonging to the Society for Pediatric Sedation using Research Electronic Data Capture to 56 pediatric sedation programs. The survey was designed to gather information regarding characteristics of their sedation service and the privileging of their sedation providers.ResultsThe overall response rate was 41 (73%) of 56. Most programs surveyed (81%) said their physicians provided sedation as a part of their primary subspecialty job description, and 17% had physicians whose sole practice was pediatric sedation and no longer practiced in their primary subspecialty. Fifty-one percent of surveyed sedation programs were within freestanding children's hospitals and 61% receive oversight by the anesthesiology department at their institution. Eighty-one percent of the sedation programs require physicians to undergo special credentialing to provide sedation. Of these, 79% grant privileging through their primary specialty, whereas 39% require separate credentialing through sedation as a stand-alone section. For initial credentialing, requirements included completion of a pediatric sedation orientation and training packet (51% of programs), sedation training during fellowship (59%), and documentation of a specific number of pediatric procedural sedation cases (49%).ConclusionsIn this survey of pediatric sedation programs belonging to the Society for Pediatric Sedation, the process for privileging providers in procedural sedation varies significantly from institution to institution. An opportunity exists to propose privileging standards for providers of pediatric procedural sedation.Copyright © 2015 by the American Academy of Pediatrics.

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