codes in the ER?

Specialties Emergency

Published

I'll likely cross post this to ER sub board too...maybe Peds.

If you work in the hospital is there a protocol in place to call NICU/Pedi nurses and doctors in an infant/pediatric code?

If not, are your ER staff NRP/NALS/PALS certified?

TIA!

aroRNBrooke

6 Posts

I'll likely cross post this to ER sub board too...maybe Peds.

If you work in the hospital is there a protocol in place to call NICU/Pedi nurses and doctors in an infant/pediatric code?

If not, are your ER staff NRP/NALS/PALS certified?

TIA

aroRNBrooke

6 Posts

Cross posted to peds/NICU boards

Is there a protocol in place at your hospital to call NICU/Pedi nurses and doctors in an infant/pediatric code?

Are you all trained in NRP/PALS as well as ACLS?

TIA!

Specializes in ED, Pedi Vasc access, Paramedic serving 6 towns.

Hi,

In the ER that I just left we worked our own pedi codes. The exception would be if it was a newborn that was freshly delivered, then we called down special care nursery staff, but other than that it is an ER and we were prepared to handle whatever came through the door!

HPRN

Pediatric Critical Care Columnist

NotReady4PrimeTime, RN

5 Articles; 7,358 Posts

Specializes in NICU, PICU, PCVICU and peds oncology.

There's no formal policy but PICU is usually alerted. We send down a doc and at least one nurse to help out and to transfer the kid up if the resus is successful.

NicuGal, MSN, RN

2,743 Posts

Specializes in NICU, PICU, PACU.

Our ER people are certified in everything. But if a mom delivers in the ambulance, home or when she gets there they call both OB and NICU as back up and to take them back to their units.

Specializes in Med-Surg, Emergency, CEN.

ER nurses, techs and providers are trained in PALS. It would be very odd if an emergency department was unable to deal with that emergency. That being said, there is no protocol that I know of but we would call them anyway.

NicuRN628

93 Posts

Specializes in NICU.

For infants they call a code pink at our hospital and NICU staff respond.

Specializes in Emergency.

All rns & docs have pals, everybody has bls. We call the pediatric hospitalist for kid codes, but that's not a written protocol. The hospitalist is in case we're successful. Having them there expedites the admission/transfer.

babybums

39 Posts

Specializes in neonatal.

I work in NICU. If we called a code I don't think anyone would come. We handle our own codes. There are always docs and nnps around. If there is a newborn baby code in er the NICU nurses go. Nurses, docs, nnps and rt are all certified in NRP.

AZQuik

224 Posts

We run our own codes adult or peds. That said we call anyone who we think will be needed in case we achieve rosc, adult or peds. That includes or, cath, neuro, peds specialist, etc.

We do get ACLS and pals. The edu program runs Ed and ICU staff through a two day course that hospital educators do. On my residency there is a lot of mock codes. We have gotten to know the code carts and heart monitors well. We also get hauled to most every medical code we can. We do CPR,run the monitor, push drugs, start lines, etc so we get comfortable in code situations.

BSN GCU 2014. ED Residency ;)

Sent from my iPhone using allnurses

Esme12, ASN, BSN, RN

1 Article; 20,908 Posts

Specializes in Critical Care, ED, Cath lab, CTPAC,Trauma.
I'll likely cross post this to ER sub board too...maybe Peds.

If you work in the hospital is there a protocol in place to call NICU/Pedi nurses and doctors in an infant/pediatric code?

If not, are your ER staff NRP/NALS/PALS certified?

TIA

cross posted/duplicate threads merged as per the Terms of Service

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