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Title: | Improving peripheral venous cannula insertion in children: a mixed methods study to develop the DIVA key | Authors: | Macfarlane, F. Keys, A. McBride, C. A. McTaggart, S. Lawton, B. Sells, C. Ullman, Amanda Rickard, C. M. Schults, J. A. Kleidon, T Gibson, V. Ware, R. S. Monteagle, E. Paterson, R. Charles, K. |
Issue Date: | 2022 | Source: | 22, (1), 2022, p. 220 | Pages: | 220 | Journal: | BMC health services research | Abstract: | OBJECTIVE: To develop and validate a difficult intravenous access risk assessment and escalation pathway, to increase first time intravenous insertion success in paediatrics. METHODS: Mixed methods underpinned by literature and co-production principles. Iterative development of the instrument was informed through semi-structured interviews and stakeholder workshops. The instrument includes a risk assessment, inserter skill self-assessment, and escalation pathways. Reproducibility, reliability, and acceptability were evaluated in a prospective cohort study at a quaternary paediatric hospital in Australia. RESULTS: Interview data (three parents, nine clinicians) uncovered two themes: i) Recognition of children with DIVA and subsequent escalation is ad hoc and problematic; and ii) Resources and training impact inserter confidence and ability. Three workshops were delivered at monthly intervals (February-April 2020) involving 21 stakeholders culminating in the co-production of the "DIVA Key". The DIVA Key was evaluated between May-December 2020 in 78 children; 156 clinicians. Seventy-eight paired assessments were undertaken with substantial agreement (concordance range = 81.5 to 83.0%) between the assessors. Interrater reliability of the DIVA risk assessment was moderate (kappa = 0.71, 95% CI 0.63-0.80). The DIVA Key predicted multiple insertion attempts for red (high risk) DIVA classification (relative risk ratio 5.7, 95% CI 1.2-27.1; reference low risk). Consumer and clinician satisfaction with DIVA Key was high (median (IQR) = 10 [8-10]; 8 [8-10 respectively). CONCLUSION: The DIVA Key is a straightforward, reliable instrument with inbuilt escalation pathway to support the identification of children with difficult intravenous access.L6372869092022-02-23 | DOI: | 10.1186/s12913-022-07605-2 | Resources: | https://www.embase.com/search/results?subaction=viewrecord&id=L637286909&from=exporthttp://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12913-022-07605-2 | | Keywords: | reproducibility;human;cannulacatheterization;child;intravenous drug administration;prospective study | Type: | Article |
Appears in Sites: | Children's Health Queensland Publications |
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