Q&A: IPs, Vascular Access Teams Work Together
Nancy Moureau: “Our priority is to minimize infections or potentially even to eliminate them. We want complications to be history. In order to achieve those goals, I see the vascular access specialist or the vascular access teams as being in a partnership with the infection preventionist.”
The PICC nurse became the PICC team, as Nancy Moureau, PhD, RN, CRNI, CPUI, VA-BC, pointed out back in May in an article in
Infection Control Today®: You wrote an article for us back in May about how the PICC nurse is evolving into the PICC team. Is that still happening?
Nancy Moureau, PhD, RN, CRNI, CPUI, VA-BC: We’re definitely seeing to transition from a focus on PICC lines to a focus more generally across the vascular access devices. Because of the advent of ultrasound and the ability to pick other choices from central venous catheters, PICC lines, peripheral catheters, lung peripheral catheters, midlines: What we’re finding is the need for specialists to be able to make those decisions. And not only make those informed decisions, but also to make those decisions in a manner that is the most successful and the safest. And when we think about success, it’s not only being able to put in the right device at the right time, but also by the right person. And in terms of administration, being successful with vascular access insertion on the first attempt also translates to significant savings. Because you’re not using multiple catheters, you’re not using more supplies. And also we have to factor in, especially for our COVID-19 patients, the savings in terms of time and efficiency.
ICT®: What part would an infection preventionist play in a PICC team?
Moureau: Really, we’re calling it more of a vascular access specialist or vascular access team. And similar to infection preventionists, what we’ve discovered is that having a vascular access specialist available in the hospital—in all hospitals—has been essential for our COVID-19 patients. So, a patient comes into the emergency room and gets emergent access. But yet this patient may be long-term. If the patient continues on to the intensive care area, then in fact they may need a central line placed and have it placed very quickly. We have various recommendations that have been issued by some international groups, specifically Doctor [Michael]
ICT®: How do the vascular access teams separate the treatment for COVID patients from non-COVID patients? Or do they just assume that everybody could possibly have COVID?
Moureau: You know, that’s kind of a chicken or egg thing, because patients come into the hospital with symptoms, and they’re going to have to determine whether it’s a COVID-19 patient. And so the differentiation has been suspected COVID-19 patients versus confirmed COVID-19 patients. For those patients who are not COVID positive and simply have other types of symptoms, a vascular access specialist provides a level of safety that the generalist nurse doesn’t have. The evidence that we have supporting that is from Doctor [Nicole]
ICT®: Who might be working for the vascular access specialist?
Moureau: When I use the term vascular access specialist, I’m thinking more as an individual, whereas a vascular access team may be comprised of multiple specialists, multiple people who have special training. We know from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, in their prior recommendations, they show that by having a specially trained person for device insertion, you reduce infections, you reduce complications overall. We’ve also seen this in some of the literature. The PIV5 Right search that was published by
ICT®: COVID-19 has forced the reallocation of a lot of resources. What’s the argument for hospitals allocating resources to vascular access teams?
Moureau: One of the questions that you asked me earlier that I didn’t fully address was how does the vascular access specialist or team work together with the infection preventionist. And when you talk about where priority should be and where allocations could be: Our priority is to minimize infections or potentially even to eliminate them. We want complications to be history. In order to achieve those goals, I see the vascular access specialist or the vascular access teams as being in a partnership with the infection preventionist. Working with the vascular access specialists in teams in order to implement guidelines, recommendations, provide education to those who are at the bedside to make sure that everyone is following policies and best practices to the level that is necessary in order to achieve our goals. A single infection preventionist or a smaller department is unable to do that. Their focus is not only on central line associated bloodstream infections, but also urinary tract infections that are associated with urinary catheters with ventilator associated pneumonia. And so there are many, many things that are on their list that must be prioritized. Aligning and partnering with these different specialty groups with the different departments that can help to implement the guidelines and make sure that things are followed will help us all to achieve the better outcomes to reduce complications and make things better for patients.
This interview has been edited for clarity and length.
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