1 / 15

Occlusion Occurrences in Peripherally Inserted Central Venous Catheters

Occlusion Occurrences in Peripherally Inserted Central Venous Catheters. Alison Yerkey, RN, BSN Judy Davidson, RN, MS, CCRN, FCCM. BACKGROUND. The most common method for withdrawing blood samples from central venous catheters is the discard method

adriel
Download Presentation

Occlusion Occurrences in Peripherally Inserted Central Venous Catheters

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Occlusion Occurrences in Peripherally Inserted Central Venous Catheters Alison Yerkey, RN, BSN Judy Davidson, RN, MS, CCRN, FCCM

  2. BACKGROUND • The most common method for withdrawing blood samples from central venous catheters is the discard method • In March 2006, a policy revision was made at Scripps Mercy Hospital in regards to the care and maintenance of peripherally inserted central venous catheters (PICC).

  3. BACKGROUND • Based on current literature and a goal to ↓iatrogenic blood loss, the push-pull method was introduced • Following implementation, staff nurses verbally reported increased PICC line occlusions- no data

  4. QUESTION • What are the possible causes of peripherally inserted central venous catheter (PICC) line occlusions in the adult medical-surgical patient at Scripps Mercy, San Diego?

  5. METHODS • Investigation ( IRB exempt: PI project) • Qualitative • Identify staff values and practices • Quantitative • Identify actual occlusion rates • Other Methods • Literature synthesis • Semi-structured interviews • Participant observation

  6. PROCEDURE • Qualitative • Verbal interviews over a two month period • Staff nurses • Five inpatient units • Two intensive care units • Two radiology PICC insertion nurses • Two IV nurses

  7. PROCEDURE • Quantitative • Log completed by IV nurses for one month • Total amount of PICCs inserted • Date of insertion • Date of clot

  8. RESULTS • 10% of 97 PICC lines inserted resulted in occlusions • Occlusions occurred using both methods of sampling • 87% of occluded PICCs required replacement

  9. Possible Causes for Occlusion 14 causes of catheter occlusion identified through interview and observation

  10. POSSIBLE CAUSES • Flushing technique • Delay in flushing following blood sampling • Insufficient flush volume (<10cc) • Unused ports not flushed • Not flushing after IVPBs and meds • Reliance on KVO rates to maintain patency • Inconsistency of flushing frequency • Differences in policy and practice regarding clamping • Heparin not used as indicated to flush Power PICC

  11. Possible Causes 9. Delay to thrombolysis Reteplase on formulary due to cost Off-label use for catheter occlusions IV team not comfortable with off-label use Staff RNs not comfortable administering 10. Use of heparin and 3cc syringe to de-clot

  12. POSSIBLE CAUSES • PICC Injection Cap – CLC 2000 11. Absence of cap 12. Insufficient flushing causing cap to occlude 13. Failure to replace occluded cap

  13. POSSIBLE CAUSES 14. Blood draw technique Inconsistent use of equipment Syringe vs Vacutainer

  14. RECOMMENDATIONS • Salvage push-pull technique • Focus action plan to ↓other causes • Lit review to justify off-label use of Reteplase • Rewrite policy • Redesign competencies • Reinforce each of the 14 points of breakdown • Return demonstration by each nurse • Repeat collection and assessment of data

  15. QUESTIONS

More Related