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The post about the kid with the expanding neck hematoma got me thinking about some of the unintended consequence of delays or disruptions in ED flow. While the prior thread focused mostly on PG/economic reasons for improving flow, those aren't the only reasons why flow should be optimized.
Timely flow of information (especially as regards lab and x-ray results) is crucial to good patient care, and lack of flow can turn cases that are cut and dry under the retrospectoscope into self-perpetuating Charlie Foxtrots. In fact, one of the most crucial skills an attending has is the ability to quickly and correctly identify who can and can't tolerate their shops' normal pattern of flow. In residency, the extra man-power that can be brought to bear at any moment can, to some extent, alleviate initially poor planning. In most community gigs, there is little in the way of surge capacity. Initial mis-steps become self-compounding and bad things happen to patients in a way that is inexplicable to those outside the situation but almost inevitable under the initial conditions.
It would seem this cascade could be avoided by the EP pushing harder on the elements that are disrupting flow and it can. The problem is that you can't push on every patient (at least not at the level of working a shift) or else you end up having no effect (and pissing off everyone you work with). Some EPs try and make up for this by trying to brute-force the initial work-up (everyone gets troponins, d-dimers, cross-sectional imaging, lactate, ammonia, and serum osmolality) which is only adaptive in highly specialized scenarios (ie. seeing exclusively high acuity/tertiary care patients with multiple organ system dysfunction and a preponderance of non-specific chief complaints). For anyone not working in that environment, the lack of efficiency in whirling up the minigun's barrels (for when a shotgun isn't broad enough) will result in an opportunity to succeed elsewhere.
The key to meeting this challenge is to know what the average times are in your shop for the crucial steps (which I think we all internalize after a month or so at a new place), and to see if your patient can tolerate those times. At my shop, I've never been able to intubate someone using meds within ten minutes of informing the nursing staff of the need for intubation. So if someone rolls in via EMS in respiratory arrest, I'm bagging for 12 minutes or using brutane. I can't get a trauma pan-scan looked at in under an hour, so if I'm concerned about a trauma patient I have to read the CT myself or that expanding pneumo will be a tension by the time the radiologist calls me.
It's mentally taxing to pull information vs. having it pushed at you, and in general it's easier when you're first out of residency and are used to inefficient systems that require almost everything to be pulled. For the mid-career attending, identifying which patients are going to require pulling (will the nurse tell you she can't get an IV on the difficult stick with the HR in the 140s?) is our greatest day-to-day challenge.
For example: after 3 yrs of not seeing kids and coming from a pediatric mecca where almost everything was pushed at me ("I've worked up and gotten the kid admitted to their specialist, here's the orders to put in the computer"), it's not rare for me to be wrong-footed by kids that look simple but don't get better with treatment. Most of my nurses can't draw blood from sick kids under 1yo (although oddly they are pretty good at IVs). If I didn't think the kid needed labs when I first saw them, I'm often determining that the kid needs transferred prior to having any labs back to tell the receiving facility about. Which I am well aware makes me look like an a--hat to the peds attending on the other end of the line (especially if they ask how long the kid has been at my ED), but unless my radar gets more finely tuned I don't have a better solution.
Thoughts, comments, questions?
Timely flow of information (especially as regards lab and x-ray results) is crucial to good patient care, and lack of flow can turn cases that are cut and dry under the retrospectoscope into self-perpetuating Charlie Foxtrots. In fact, one of the most crucial skills an attending has is the ability to quickly and correctly identify who can and can't tolerate their shops' normal pattern of flow. In residency, the extra man-power that can be brought to bear at any moment can, to some extent, alleviate initially poor planning. In most community gigs, there is little in the way of surge capacity. Initial mis-steps become self-compounding and bad things happen to patients in a way that is inexplicable to those outside the situation but almost inevitable under the initial conditions.
It would seem this cascade could be avoided by the EP pushing harder on the elements that are disrupting flow and it can. The problem is that you can't push on every patient (at least not at the level of working a shift) or else you end up having no effect (and pissing off everyone you work with). Some EPs try and make up for this by trying to brute-force the initial work-up (everyone gets troponins, d-dimers, cross-sectional imaging, lactate, ammonia, and serum osmolality) which is only adaptive in highly specialized scenarios (ie. seeing exclusively high acuity/tertiary care patients with multiple organ system dysfunction and a preponderance of non-specific chief complaints). For anyone not working in that environment, the lack of efficiency in whirling up the minigun's barrels (for when a shotgun isn't broad enough) will result in an opportunity to succeed elsewhere.
The key to meeting this challenge is to know what the average times are in your shop for the crucial steps (which I think we all internalize after a month or so at a new place), and to see if your patient can tolerate those times. At my shop, I've never been able to intubate someone using meds within ten minutes of informing the nursing staff of the need for intubation. So if someone rolls in via EMS in respiratory arrest, I'm bagging for 12 minutes or using brutane. I can't get a trauma pan-scan looked at in under an hour, so if I'm concerned about a trauma patient I have to read the CT myself or that expanding pneumo will be a tension by the time the radiologist calls me.
It's mentally taxing to pull information vs. having it pushed at you, and in general it's easier when you're first out of residency and are used to inefficient systems that require almost everything to be pulled. For the mid-career attending, identifying which patients are going to require pulling (will the nurse tell you she can't get an IV on the difficult stick with the HR in the 140s?) is our greatest day-to-day challenge.
For example: after 3 yrs of not seeing kids and coming from a pediatric mecca where almost everything was pushed at me ("I've worked up and gotten the kid admitted to their specialist, here's the orders to put in the computer"), it's not rare for me to be wrong-footed by kids that look simple but don't get better with treatment. Most of my nurses can't draw blood from sick kids under 1yo (although oddly they are pretty good at IVs). If I didn't think the kid needed labs when I first saw them, I'm often determining that the kid needs transferred prior to having any labs back to tell the receiving facility about. Which I am well aware makes me look like an a--hat to the peds attending on the other end of the line (especially if they ask how long the kid has been at my ED), but unless my radar gets more finely tuned I don't have a better solution.
Thoughts, comments, questions?