Editorial Type:
Article Category: Research Article
 | 
Online Publication Date: 01 Dec 2005

The Vanderbilt PICC Service: Program, Procedural, and Patient Outcomes Successes

RN, BS
Page Range: 183 – 192
DOI: 10.2309/java.10-4-10
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Abstract

Since its inception in early 2000, Vanderbilt University's Peripherally Inserted Central Catheter (PICC) Service has experienced a high level of success as measured by high proficiency rates and increasing patient procedures each year, low complication rates during and after PICC placements, and an increasing scope of influence within the Vanderbilt University Medical Center and Children's Hospital, the surrounding community, and in the Southeastern United States. Primary drivers of the PICC Service's continuing success include consistent applications of technique and technology, a data-driven approach to assessing the program's progress, and appropriately managing customers' expectations and needs. Over the past five years, data were collected on more than 12,500 PICC placements performed in this specialized nursing program. Retrospective analyses of the data demonstrate an increasing rate of successful placements (from 87.2% to 92.4%) since the program's inception in 2000 to late 2004. Furthermore, the choice of PICC technology has had a significant impact on the odds for occlusion or infection. The Vanderbilt PICC Service provides a model by which other programs can be established, maintained, and expanded into advanced practice.

Copyright: © 2005 Association for Vascular Access

Contributor Notes

Correspondence concerning this article should be addressed to doug.burns@vanderbilt.edu

Doug Burns, RN, BS, has been involved with vascular access for approximately 18 years. For the past six years, Burns has helped to guide the radiology PICC Service at Vanderbilt University Medical Center and Children's Hospital into one of the premier services across the country. Burns also enjoys teaching when possible. He has developed a program allowing physicians and nurses to come into Vanderbilt and have hands-on experience when learning to place PICC lines and to use ultrasound for guidance.

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