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- Guillaume Fontaine, Massimo Forgione, Francis Lusignan, Marc-André Lanoue, and Simon Drouin.
- Montréal, Quebec, Canada; St. Hyacinthe, Quebec, Canada. Electronic address: guillaume.fontaine@umontreal.ca.
- J Emerg Nurs. 2018 May 1; 44 (3): 228-235.
IntroductionThe Canadian C-Spine Rule (CCR) is a clinical decision aid to facilitate the safe removal of cervical collars in the alert, orientated, low-risk adult trauma patient. Few health care settings have assessed initiatives to train charge nurses to use the CCR. This practice improvement project conducted in a secondary trauma center in Canada aimed to (1) train charge nurses of the emergency room to use the CCR, (2) monitor its use throughout the project period, and (3) compare the assessments of the charge nurses with those of emergency physicians.MethodsThe project began with the creation of an interdisciplinary team. Clinical guidelines were established by the interdisciplinary project team. Nine charge nurses of the emergency room were then trained to use the CCR (3 on each 8-hour shift). The use of the CCR was monitored throughout the project period, from June 1 to October 5, 2016.ResultsThe 3 aims of this practice improvement project were attained successfully. Over a 5-month period, 114 patients were assessed with the CCR. Charge nurses removed the cervical collars for 54 of 114 patients (47%). A perfect agreement rate (114 of 114 patients, 100%) was attained between the assessments of the nurses and those of physicians.DiscussionThis project shows that the charge nurses of a secondary trauma center can use the CCR safely on alert, orientated, and low-risk adult trauma patients as demonstrated by the agreement in the assessments of emergency room nurses and physicians.Crown Copyright © 2017. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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