Hi Carrie,
In my opinion it is more important that your staff are skilled in responding to a medical emergency and can initiate high quality compressions, have access to an AED, and can activate EMS. This takes training and practice and can save lives.
I have found that many staff in Ambulatory don't have the knowledge and skills to respond quickly and efficiently. Just doing BLS every 2 years is not enough.
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Susanna Gadsby MSN, MBA, AMB-BC, NPD-BC
Clinical Educator, Ambulatory
AAACN Certified
Nursing Professional Development Specialist
susanna.m.gadsby@hitchcock.org------------------------------
Original Message:
Sent: 05-30-2024 09:25
From: Carrie Karcz
Subject: Crash Carts in Cardiology Clinic
Hello,
We have a freestanding Cardiology clinic that is wondering if they need a crash cart, or if a more simple emergency kit would be appropriate for their clinic. The most complicated testing done at their clinic is echocardiograms/bubble studies. They do use Definity for contrast. They are about 5 minutes from a hospital, although EMS response times may vary as it is a small community. Our emergency kits do contain things like oral airways, Epi pens/Benadryl/famotidine for allergic reactions, ASA and nitro for cardiac emergencies. They also have an AED on site. Would there be any reason why a crash cart would be indicated?
Thanks for your input!
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Carrie Karcz, BSN, RN, AMB-BC
Ambulatory Care Nurse Educator
Bellin Health by Emplify
Green Bay, WI
carrie.karcz@bellin.org
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