Welcome to ED orientation
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Transcript Welcome to ED orientation
Welcome to ED Orientation
ALINA TSYRULNIK MD
CLINICAL INSTRUCTOR
ASSISTANT RESIDENCY PROGRAM DIRECTOR
OFF-SERVICE RESIDENT DIRECTOR
DEPARTMENT OF EMERGENCY MEDICINE
YALE UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF MEDICINE
Goal of this Orientation
PREPARE OUR OFF-SERVICE ROTATORS FOR
PATIENT CARE IN THE ED FROM THE
MOMENT THEY START THEIR ROTATION
Objectives of this Orientation
Logistics of working in the ED
Your ED team
Observations vs. Admission
EPIC details
Admission/ Discharge
Note completion
High- Yield Emergency Medicine Topics
Cardiac Chest Pain
Anaphylaxis
Trauma
ACS: STEMI vs. NSTEMI
Low/ Moderate risk CP
Backboard clearance
C-spine precautions and clearance
E-FAST exam
Intoxicated Patient
Psychiatric Patient
Medical Clearance
LOGISTICS OF WORKING IN THE
ED
ED Layout
Section A: Highest Acuity- open 24/7
2 resident teams
Staffing:
Green: 9 beds +2 resuscitation bays
Purple: 10 beds + 2 resuscitation bays
2 attendings 9am-1am (1 attending 1am-9am)
Senior Resident Supervision
Trauma: All trauma patients that go to resuscitation bays are designated as “full” or “modified”
trauma
Off-service residents are not responsible for taking care of “modified” or “full” trauma
Off-service residents are responsible for trauma patients that don’t meet “modified” or “full”
trauma criteria
Section B+C: Lower Acuity- open 24/7 (as of July 1 2014)
May still get trauma patients that are not “full” or “modified” traumas
Staffing
At least 3 resident/PA teams in each section during the day (down to 3 total teams overnight)
supervised by an attending+/- senior resident
Senior resident present at high volume times
TRIAGE IS NOT A PERFECT SCIENCE- APPROACH EACH PATIENT AS IF
THEY COULD BE VERY SICK
ED Layout- Other areas of Interest
Patient entrances/ triage/ registration areas:
Ambulance
Waiting Room
Central Communications Desk (a.k.a. “the bubble”)
Located at the ambulance entrance
All calls/ faxes
Location of Medtronic Pacemaker interrogation equipment
Intoxication Observation Unit (IOU)
Located in hallway behind Section C
Staffed by an ED tech
Crisis Intervention Unit (CIU) = Psychiatric ED
Separate unit staffed by psychiatry residents, attendings, nurses, techs
Chest Pain Center (CPC)
Separate ED observation unit for low/moderate chest pain patients
Staffed by B-side attending, PA (during working hours), nurse, tech
Your team:
Attendings
Supervise multiple teams simultaneously
24/7 in-house coverage for every section of ED
Senior ED Resident
Not available on every shift
ED Nurse
ED Technician
Business Associate (BA)
Your ED shift: Arrival and Sign-out
Arrival: at least 5 min. prior to scheduled time
B+ C sides: divide patient beds among providers
Sign-out: 2-part process
Off-going senior resident or attending presents patients in bed-order
to the in-coming team
Part one: at the computer- all the details (including labs, social issues,
Ddx)
Part two: at the bedside- off-going attending introduces the in-coming
team
Patient is made aware of the work-up progress, pending studies and
reason for why s/he is still in the ED, and approximate timeline
After sign-out
See all new patients
Introduce self to old patients
Your ED shift: Seeing patients
All patients assigned to your bed assignment are YOUR
patients
See them within the first 5 min. of arrival in section A or 20min.
in section B&C
See patients in parallel: essential EM skill
Present your patients as soon as you saw them
To senior and/or attending
Do not pile up patients to present in bulks
Enter all lab orders ASAP
Notify your nurse of the plan as soon as you know it
Charts must be completed by the time patient leaves
the department
Your ED shift: Disposition
Important to notify the patient and nurse as soon as the
decision is made
NEVER discharge the patient prior to making the
ATTENDING AWARE that the patient is being discharged
All PMDs need to be notified that their patient was in the
ED
Especially for high-risk CC: HA, CP, AP, BP
Document all communication in chart
AMA discharge: ALWAYS alert the attending ASAP
Document capacity to make decision
Can not be: intoxicated, mentally retarded, cognitively impaired
Give appropriate discharge instructions and prescriptions
Encourage return to the ED
Your ED shift: Admission vs. Observation
Reasoning: patients who have normal vital
signs, normal lab results, normal imaging may
not meet criteria by insurance companies to pay
for a full hospital admission
These patients may still require medical care not
reflected by these numbers
Logistics: most of the time, the ED attending
will be able to determine admit vs. obs
Care Coordinators are specially trained in making the
decision
Will sometimes ask you to change the admitobs or
obsadmit booking
Always make the attending aware of the change
The attending makes the final decision
Your ED Shift: Medical Admission
Enter order in EPIC: “ED Admit”
Observation vs. Admission
Medical vs. Non-medical
For medical, pick team:
Hospitalist =patient’s PMD is on hospitalist team
All other medical admits =no PMD or PMD doesn’t admit to hospitalist
YED attending= CPC
PCC/ generalist= patient goes to PCC
Goodyear =cardiology complaint without Cardiologist or University Cardiology
General cardiology =cardiology complaint with private (non-university)
Cardiologist
Klatsin =ESLD
ESRD
Donaldson = HIV/AIDS
Fill out the rest of the booking (specify tele vs. floor, etc)
Your ED Shift: Admission to an ICU
Step 1: notify Bed Manager
Step 2: Call appropriate team for sign-out. Get name of
admitting attending.
CCU: page CCU fellow
MICU: page MICU admission team
SDU: page SDU resident
SICU: the surgical team is responsible for getting SICU attending
aproval
NICU: don’t need to page anyone b/c you are admitting to a team that
should already be involved in patient care
Step 3: Attending- to- attending sign-out.
YNHH admission policy: the ED attending makes the final
decision where a patient is admitted
Please let your senior resident and/or attending aware of any pushback you get from the admitting team.
Your ED shift: Admission to CPC
CPC or in-hospital ROMI
Both:
low/ moderate risk chest pain patients who need a ROMI
Observation, telemetry admission
Not for ACS patients
No nitro drips, no heparin drips
CPC: patient will get Stress Test at the end of their admission
Your role
Place appropriate EPIC order:
• Order Sets: “ED Chest Pain Observation”
EPIC Note:
• Smartphrase: “.edobsadmit”
Order all out-patient medications
In-Hospital ROMI: most will NOT get a stress test
Patient had a stress in the past year
Patient with other diagnoses possible (other than CAD)
Patient needs isolation
Patient morbidly obese (will not fit stress table)
Patient can not self-transfer (onto stress table)
Your ED shift: Admission of hip fractures
For isolated hip fractures
No other traumatic injuries
Mechanical cause (i.e. not syncope that needs to be workedup)
Orthopedic team evaluates patient (as all other ortho
consultations)
Computer orders:
Admit to: Hospitalist
Service: Medicine
Unit type: free-text ortho/ hospitalist 7-7
Page hospitalist at 766-7416 to give verbal sign-out
Other ED Pearls
COMMUNICATION IS CRITICAL
Team-work is essential to surviving in the ED (both patient
and resident): greatest off-service resident pitfall is not
communicating with the nurses and attending/senior
Let your senior/ attending know:
Patient seems to be sicker…
than triaged
than last time seen
than signed out
You are feeling overwhelmed and are falling behind
You need a break (nourishment/ bodily functions)
Navigating EPIC in the ED
Log in and pick correct environment
Sign in
Pick your work area
Navigating EPIC in the ED
Typical day in ED
ED Notes in EPIC
Double click patient name
My note TAB is open
Pick My Note button
You are responsible for…
HPI: add chief complain
ROS
PE
If you did procedures (e.g. EKG)
EKG: change provider
ED Notes in EPIC
To view your full note click on Notes
Bellow PE and above Procedures
free-text Assessment and Plan
MDM
What was done/ found in ED
Disposition
Also, free-text
PMD/ consultants called (name and time)
DO NOT WRITE IN THE ED COURSE SECTION
ED Notes in EPIC
When finished documenting: Share
When an attending has signed the note, the system
will only let you Sign
Pick your attending to Co-sign
Do not start 2 separate notes
Admitting Patient in EPIC
Double click to open patient chart
Open Admit Tab
Navigate through sections
Clinical Impression= diagnosis
Manage Orders= “ED admit”…
Disposition= admit
Discharging Patient in EPIC
Double click to open patient chart
Open Discharge Tab
Navigate through sections
Disposition= discharge
Follow-up= pick appropriate MD/ interval of follow-up
Clinical Impression= diagnosis
Orders= Discharge prescriptions
Discharge instructions= diagnosis/ symptoms
Discharging Patient in EPIC
When ready to discharge, open Discharge Tab
Pick Preview/ Print Section
Click Print
Hand Instructions to nurse
with signed prescriptions
QUESTIONS
THE ED PATIENT WITH CHEST
PAIN
Background
5% of all ED visits = 5 million visits per year in the
US
One of the highest-risk chief complaints
For patient morbidity/ mortality
For MD litigation
Wide differential- most is high mortality
IN THE ED, WE MUST THINK OF WHAT WILL KILL THE
PATIENT
Acute Coronary Syndrome
Pulmonary Embolism
Aortic Dissection
Pneumonia
Pneumothorax
Pericarditis
Esophageal Rupture
ACS: STEMI=CATH LAB ACTIVATION
National guidelines for STEMI cath lab activations:
Door-to-EKG: 5 minutes
Door-to-balloon: 90 minutes
All EKGs seen and interpreted by an attending immediately
“Cath Lab activation” is done by ED attending
Cath lab personnel are assembled (if not in-house overnight)
Cath lab attending gives a call to the ED attending to get quick story
NO role for:
Cardiac enzyme results
Cardiology Fellow consult
Chest x-ray results
Patient needs to be rolling to the cath lab within 25 minutes from arrival at
ED triage, having gotten:
ASA 325mg
Oxygen
Plavix
Heparin 5000U
+/- morphine
+/- nitroglycerin
+/- Beta-blocker
ACTIVATION IS BASED PURELY ON EKG and PATIENT’S PRESENTATION
ACS: STEMI=CATH LAB ACTIVATION
What does the attending look for to activate cath lab?
Activation Criteria
ST elevations of >1mm in 2 consecutive (anatomical) leads
New LBBB
Other signs that may be present
Dysrhythmia
Reciprocal changes
Dynamic changes
Why should you care?
As an MD (doesn’t matter what specialty), you must know
what to do with acute chest pain!
ACS: “good story”
What if the EKG is not clear-cut, but the patient is giving a “classic MI
story”
No immediate cath lab activation: role of cardiology consult
Resident calls fellow
Attending calls attending
Instruct the nurse to do q5min. EKGs
Dynamic EKG changes activate cath lab
Possibilities for ACS: all should get heparin
Good story – EKG changes – troponins = unstable angina/ ACS
Good story – EKG changes + troponins = NSTEMI/ACS
Good story + EKG changes +/- troponins = STEMI/ACS
Especially if came in first few hours (<6hr)
Bad story/ no CP – EKG + troponins= NOT ACS
Look for other causes of troponins
ESRD
Tachycardia/ Sepsis
Myocarditis
Chest Pain Patient Disposition
Low/ Moderate Risk CP
High Risk CP
Need a ROMI
EKG and enzymes q3-6hrs
x 3 times +/- stress
ACS
In-hospital ROMI vs.
CPC
Decision made by ED
attending in consultation
with cardiologist and PMD
Heparin gtt
unstable vital signs
Cardiology team
Goodyer / General
Cardiology
telemetry
CCU/CSDU
Cocaine Use Chest Pain
Rule in approx. 6% of time
Avoid Beta-Blockade
Treat chest pain and/or tachycardia with benzodiazepines
QUESTIONS
THE ED PATIENT WITH
ANAPHYLAXIS
Anaphylaxis/ Angioedema
Immediate Medications
Epinephrine:
Mild- moderate: 0.3mL of 1:1000 dilution IM in thigh
May repeat q5min. Up to max 3 doses
Severe: 1-5mL of 1:10,000 IV drip over 10min…continuous
Solu-Medrol 125mg IV
Benadryl 50mg IV
Pepcid 20mg IV
Fluids
Albuterol PRN
Why should you care?
Anaphylaxis happens on every in-hospital unit
Will NOT have time to look up treatment
QUESTIONS
THE ED TRAUMA PATIENT
The Trauma Patient
There are triage criteria for activating “trauma alerts”
for patients: “full trauma” vs. “modified trauma”
You are responsible for those who didn’t meet criteria
THIS DOES NOT MEAN THAT THEY ARE NOT SERIOUSLY INJURED
Most are on back-boards and with c-spine collars
Back-boards must be removed within 15 min. of arrival
To prevent pressure ulcers
To prevent agitation
Spinal precautions maintained at all times
Never remove a c-collar, never allow a patient to remove a c-collar
Backboard Clearance
4 person job: need 3 other people
One holding C-spine stability (with collar in place)
Two holding torso
One (you) palpating spine and rectal tone
Tenderness at midline
Bruising
Lacerations
Stepoffs
Rectal Tone
Gross blood on rectal exam
Clearing a C-collar
Done by senior resident/ attending ONLY
Clinical Rules for clearing C-collars
Canadian
Nexus
Midline tenderness
Focal neurological deficits
Altered level of consciousness
Intoxication
Distracting Injury
Trauma ABCDE’s
Airway
Breathing
Circulation
Disability (GCS)
Exposure
Document all injuries and formulate a plan for
intervention/ imaging if necessary
FAST exam
Focused Assessment by Sonography for Trauma
Ultrasound exam looking for free fluid
Abdomen
RUQ/ LUQ
Pelvis
Pericardial Effusion
E-FAST: extended FAST
Examines for pneumothorax
More sensitive than supine x-ray
Validated in unstable patients
Can not be used to exclude intra-abdominal trauma
“Pan-Scan”
“Pan-scan”= CT scan
Head (no contrast)
C-spine (no contrast)
Chest/ Abdomen/ Pelvis (contrast x2)
T-/L- Spine reconstructions
Contrast: IV and PO
PO contrast given by the tech immediately prior to the scan
Evaluates duodenal injury
Protocol MUCH different from usual PO contrast
Must specify this when ordering the study and make nurse aware
Usual protocol: wait 2hrs. after PO contrast complete
More Trauma Pearls
Laceration/ Abrasion
Tetanus
Contaminated wound: ?Antibiotics
Beware
ICH
Old people: subdural/ intraparenchymal
splenic lacerations
Immediately alert the attending for any vital sign abnormalities
or changes in mental status
Vital Signs
Narrow pulse pressures
Mild tachycardia
Cause of trauma: mechanical vs. medical
QUESTIONS
The Intoxicated ED Patient
Intoxication
Need to be screened for other causes of their altered
mental status
Hypoglycemia
Head trauma
other toxic ingestions
At minimum:
vital signs
FSG
+/- Breathalyzer
Consider whether any further testing would change
management or disposition
Most cases will not need serum overdose/ urine tox
Document SI/ HI
Re-evaluate after clinical sobriety
Intoxicated Patients
Clinical sobriety is the bar- many patients will go
into withdrawal if you wait for their breathalyzer to
go below .08
Alcohol levels decrease by ~ .025/ hour
Look over all documents in patient’s chart
Police “paper”
Requires “physician clearance”
Nursing/ triage/ call-in sheets
If medical evaluation is negative, and patient is only
intoxicated
Enter “ED Sobriety Hold” order
Patient will be placed in IOU until sobriety
Overdose: Physical Exam
Vital Signs
Pupils
Pulmonary Edema
Skin
Bowel Sounds
Mental Status
Overdose
Document SI/ HI on all patients
SI/HI must be re-assessed when clinically sober
Consider overdose in any patient with SI
Poison Control 1-800-222-1222 must be called for all
ingestions/ overdoses
On-call toxicologist is available 24hr
Get EKG
Consider overdose labs: Serum tox, LFTs, Utox
QUESTIONS
The ED patient with Psychiatric
Complaint or Ingestion
Medical Clearance
Patients going to CIU require medical clearance if
Over 50yo
Has any medical PMHx
What needs to happen:
Full physical exam
Some may need: EKG/ CXR/ Basic Labs
Medical clearance means:
All medical problems resolved
no IVs in
medically stable
Overdose patients are not medically clear
Check past charts
Psychiatric patients may not be forthcoming with their PMHx
Once cleared:
Epic order “psych clearance”
Alert patient’s nurse
Call 688-1616 to give CIU signout
QUESTIONS
THANK YOU FOR YOUR
ATTENTION
THE END