Impact on 30-day survival of time taken by a critical care transport team to reach the bedside of critically ill children
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journal contribution
posted on 2020-05-29, 09:38authored bySarah Seaton, Padmanabhan Ramnarayan, Christina Pagel, Patrick Davies, Elizabeth Draper
[First paragraph] Following centralisation of paediatric intensive care in England and Wales, nearly 5000 critically ill children are transported from local hospitals to paediatric intensive care units (PICUs) annually. The majority of transports are performed by ten regionally based paediatric critical care transport teams (PCCTs) [1]. As arrival of the PCCT represents the first interaction these children have with specialist paediatric critical care, a key standard set by the national Paediatric Intensive Care Society (PICS) [2] is that a PCCT should arrive at the child’s bedside within three hours of agreeing they require PICU admission (referred to as ‘time-to-bedside’).
Funding
We would like to thank PICANet and ICNARC for providing data for this study, and particularly acknowledge the support of the transport teams and paediatric intensive care units that have submitted data used in this study.
History
Citation
Intensive Care Medicine (2020) In Press
Version
AM (Accepted Manuscript)
Published in
Intensive Care Medicine
Publisher
Springer (part of Springer Nature)
issn
0342-4642
Acceptance date
2020-05-28
Copyright date
2020
Notes
All data can be requested directly from PICANet, ICNARC and NHS Digital.