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Developing Appropriateness Criteria for Pediatric Vascular Access

Amanda Ullman, Vineet Chopra, Erin Brown, Tricia Kleidon, Marie Cooke, Claire M. Rickard, Steven J. Bernstein

2020PEDIATRICS20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To describe the methodology undertaken to provide guidance on the appropriateness, as well as inappropriateness, of vascular access device selection, characteristics, and insertion technique for pediatric patients. METHODS: The RAND Corporation–University of California, Los Angeles Appropriateness Method was used. After definition of key terms and scope, a systematic review of the pediatric vascular access literature was undertaken. Clinical scenarios were developed to reflect the common indications for vascular access across pediatric health care. These were sectioned according to (1) device selection, (2) device characteristics, and (3) insertion technique. An interdisciplinary panel of experts (N = 14) consisting of leading experts representing diverse pediatric clinical disciplines including anesthesiology, cardiology and cardiac surgery, critical care and emergency, general surgery, hematology and oncology, hospital medicine, infectious disease, interventional radiology, pharmacology, regional pediatric hospitalist, and vascular access nursing specialties was convened. The scenarios were rated for appropriateness by the panel over 2 rounds (1 [highly inappropriate] to 9 [highly appropriate]). Round 1 ratings were completed anonymously and independently by panel members and classified into 3 levels of appropriateness: appropriate, uncertain, and inappropriate, or disagreement. For round 2, panelists met in-person to discuss the round 1 ratings and independently rerated the indications. All indications were reclassified into 3 levels of appropriateness or disagreement. CONCLUSIONS: The RAND Corporation–University of California, Los Angeles Appropriateness Method provides a rigorous, in-depth and transparent methodology to develop the first appropriateness criteria for the selection of pediatric vascular access devices in a range of patient groups.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineAppropriateness criteriaAppropriate Use CriteriaPediatric emergency medicineVascular accessMEDLINEReimbursementHealth careFamily medicineMedical emergencyEmergency departmentNursingSurgeryInternal medicineRadiologyEmergency physicianEconomicsLawPolitical scienceHemodialysisEconomic growthCentral Venous Catheters and HemodialysisAcute Kidney Injury ResearchVascular Procedures and Complications