Facultad de Enfermería y Fisioterapia Salus Infirmorum

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Airway management in neonatal intensive care units: the PIC-NIC survey / Katie E. Foy, Timothy M. Cook, Bernie Marden, Fiona E. Kelly

Material type: Continuing resourceContinuing resourceISSN: 1745-1205Subject(s): intubation | ventilation | airway management | intensive care | video laryngoscopy | capnography In: Infant -- 2019, v. 15, n3, p. 92-94Summary: Improvements in airway management have occurred in almost all UK adult intensive care units following the publication of the Fourth National Audit Project (NAP4) in 2011. Subsequently the PIC-NIC survey investigated whether the lessons learned from NAP4 had filtered into paediatric practice. This article highlights the relevant findings for neonatal healthcare professionals by discussing the high-risk nature of neonatal airway management and strategies that might be used to improve safety including planning for difficulty, immediate access to emergency airway equipment and the role of continuous waveform capnography and videolaryngoscopy.
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Artículo de revista Artículo de revista Revistas y artículos
Non-fiction PP (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available Artículo de revista 5955

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Bibliografía: p.93-94

Improvements in airway management have occurred in almost all UK adult intensive care units following the publication of the Fourth National Audit Project (NAP4) in 2011. Subsequently the PIC-NIC survey investigated whether the lessons learned from NAP4 had filtered into paediatric practice. This article highlights the relevant findings for neonatal healthcare professionals by discussing the high-risk nature of neonatal airway management and strategies that might be used to improve safety including planning for difficulty, immediate access to emergency airway equipment and the role of continuous waveform capnography and videolaryngoscopy.

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