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Patient Safety in NICU

Ensuring safety in a tense environment

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Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU), as a highly sensitive and technologically-driven environment, signals the importance of lack of situation awareness as a cause of mistakes and accidents. Adverse events and near misses resulting from human errors can cause morbidity and, in some cases, lead to permanent disability and death.

 

By design, GE HealthCare solutions may help NICU staff to minimize the errors and mitigate the risks, creating a safe environment in terms of infection control, reduced clinical workload and better caregiver/parents-baby interaction, for patients, parents and professionals.

Want to enhance patient safety?

FOOTNOTES

  1. Chatziioannidis I, Mitsiakos G, Vouzas F. Focusing on patient safety in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit environment. J Pediatr Neonat Individual Med. 2017; 6(1):e060132. doi: 10.7363/060132.
  2. Ferguson JK, Gill A. Risk-stratified nosocomial infection surveillance in a neonatal intensive care unit: report on 24 months of surveillance. J Paediatr Child Healtch 1996; 32:525–531.
    https://www.nature.com/articles/7211120#ref-CR4
  3. Hentschel J, de Veer I, Gastmeier P, Ruden H, Obladen M. Neonatal nosocomial infection surveillance: incidences by site and a cluster of necrotizing enterocolitis. Infection 1999; 27:234–238.
    https://www.nature.com/articles/7211120#ref-CR5
  4. NHS alert May 2019 — Assessment and management of babies who are accidentally dropped in hospital.
  5. Monson SA, Henry E, Lambert DK, Schmutz N, Christensen RD. In-hospital falls of newborn infants: data from a multihospital health care system. Pediatrics. 2008; 122(2):e277-e280.
  6. Kahn DJ, Fisher PD, Hertzler DA 2nd. Variation in management of in-hospital newborn falls: a singlecenter experience. Journal Of Neurosurgery Pediatrics. 2017; 20(2):176–182.
  7. Vermont Oxford Network. NICU By The Numbers. Accessed March 1, 2019.
  8. Barber N, DeCristofaro JD, and Chen J. Hypothermia and re-warming in extremely low birthweight infants and subsequent clinical consequences. Pediatric Academic Society Meeting, May 2006, EPAS2006: 59:365.
  9. Laptook AR, Salhab W, Bhaskar B and Neonatal Research Network. Admission temperature of low birthweight infants: Predictors and associated morbidties. Peiatrics 2007; 119:e643-e649.
  10. Miller SS, Gould JB, and Lee HC. Hypothermia in very low birthweight infant: Incidence and risk factors. Pediatric Academic Society Meeting, 5/6/2007, E-PAS2007:616280.31.
  11. Bhatt DH, Carlos CG, Parikh AN, White R, Seri I, and Ramanathan R. Prevalence of tranitional hypothermia in newborn infants on admission to newborn intensive care units. Pediatric Academic Society Metting, 5/7/2007, E-PAS2007:617933.23.
  12. Sendelbach S, Funk M. Alarm fatigue: a patient safety concern. AACN Adv Crit Care. 2013; 24(4):378–386. Accessed October 22, 2019.
  13. Patient Safety in the NICU - A Comprehensive Review Haifa A. Samra, PhD, RN-NIC; Jacqueline M. McGrath, PhD, RN, FNAP, FAAN.
  14. Burnout syndrome among critical care healthcare workers, Nathalie Embriaco, Laurent Papazian, Nancy Kentish-Barnes, Frederic Pochard, Elie Azoulay, Curr Opin Crit Care, Oct 2007.
JB04952XE September 2023