Adherence to safety guidelines on paediatric procedural sedation: the results of a nationwide survey under general paediatricians in The Netherlands

Objectives Following two fatal accidents during paediatric procedural sedation (PS), the authors investigated the level of adherence to established safety standards on PS in a nationwide cohort of fully trained general paediatricians, entrusted with PS. Study design and methods: Sample survey Safety guidelines on PS were split into four domains (“Presedation Assessment”, “Monitoring during PS”, “Recovery after PS” and “Facilities and Competences for Emergencies and Rescue”). Each domain was operationalised into sub-domains and items. Items were presented within a questionnaire list as procedur... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Leroy, P L J M
Nieman, F H M
Blokland-Loggers, H E
Schipper, D M
Zimmermann, L J I
Knape, J T A
Dokumenttyp: TEXT
Erscheinungsdatum: 2010
Verlag/Hrsg.: BMJ Publishing Group Ltd
Schlagwörter: Short report
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-26806172
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : http://adc.bmj.com/cgi/content/short/adc.2009.165647v2

Objectives Following two fatal accidents during paediatric procedural sedation (PS), the authors investigated the level of adherence to established safety standards on PS in a nationwide cohort of fully trained general paediatricians, entrusted with PS. Study design and methods: Sample survey Safety guidelines on PS were split into four domains (“Presedation Assessment”, “Monitoring during PS”, “Recovery after PS” and “Facilities and Competences for Emergencies and Rescue”). Each domain was operationalised into sub-domains and items. Items were presented within a questionnaire list as procedural points of attention on which respondents could give their personal adherence score. Percentages of full adherence were calculated. Non-adherence was defined as gradual deviation from full adherence. After factor and reliability analysis, observed scores were summed up to scales, and results were transformed to a 0–10 report mark (RM). An RM of ≥9 is considered as a satisfactory level of adherence while an RM <6 is considered as unacceptably low. Results Full adherence was rare. For most (sub) domains, only a minority of respondents achieved a satisfactory level of adherence. Large numbers of respondents had scores below 6. Conclusions Potentially unsafe PS practices are common under Dutch general paediatricians, despite the availability of guidelines. The design of guidelines should include a goal-directed plan for implementation including training, initiatives for continuous quality assurance and improvement and repeated measurements of adherence to guidelines.