2010
DOI: 10.1016/j.jen.2009.11.003
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Impact of an Emergency Nurse–Initiated Asthma Management Protocol on Door-to-First-Salbutamol-Nebulization-Time in a Pediatric Emergency Department

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Cited by 18 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…Our results are consistent with those of Qazi et al, 10 who found that time to first salbutamol administration (mean of 31 min) and time to corticosteroid administration improved after their emergency department implemented a nurseinitiated protocol. Similar to our study, Qazi et al failed to find a reduction in emergency department length of stay despite earlier implementation of appropriate rescue medications.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 92%
“…Our results are consistent with those of Qazi et al, 10 who found that time to first salbutamol administration (mean of 31 min) and time to corticosteroid administration improved after their emergency department implemented a nurseinitiated protocol. Similar to our study, Qazi et al failed to find a reduction in emergency department length of stay despite earlier implementation of appropriate rescue medications.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 92%
“…Time to these interventions at our institution in the control period was already substantially less than in Wolff 's study intervention period, likely reflecting the use of verbal orders. ED overcrowding may lead to delayed treatment and prolonged ED LOS (6). Despite a 3.9% increase in patient census at our institution over the study period (with no concomitant increase in staffing), our time to serum bilirubin sampling and phototherapy initiation improved with the use of the management protocol.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Clinical pathways operationalize best evidence guidelines into accessible bedside formats for health care provider teams (5). Management protocols, also known as standing orders or medical directives, further improve the effectiveness of clinical pathways by delegating authority for nonphysician implementers to perform designated actions prior to physician assessment, thus facilitating timely care (6). Studies evaluating PED nurse-initiated clinical pathways and management protocols have demonstrated significant outcome improvements for acutely ill patients (5,(7)(8)(9).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These studies describe improvements in several aspects of patient care outcomes as a result of nurse-initiated care, including regulation of blood glucose [1215], reduction in length of intubation [16, 17], reduction in the need for physical restraint [18], improved pain control [19, 20], improved outcome for myocardial infarction patients [21, 22], reduction in the number of catheter-associated urinary tract infections [23], and reduction in time to first treatment for asthmatic patients [24, 25]. For example, in their 2007 article, Wong et al report “triage nurse-initiated pain relief has been evident as an effective measure for pain management” [26].…”
Section: Nurse-initiated Protocolsmentioning
confidence: 99%