Does
anyone know of any PICC insertion classes for nurses wanting to become PICC
inserters scheduled for Wisconsin?
It is
my understanding that to become certified, you need 8 hours of instruction and 3
successful observed insertions.
Once you become a certified PICC inserter, what
are the requirements for maintaining certification?
Thanks, Shirley
-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]On Behalf Of Lynn Hadaway
Sent: Tuesday, August 08, 2006 3:46 PM
To: Galloway, Margy; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: questions for colloguesThe one and only way that stopcocks might be used, in my opinion, on any catheter may be for drawing blood samples **only** if it is attached for the procedure and then removed and discarded immediately. I have heard some peds people talk about their success with using stopcocks to attach a heparinized syringe to one side for drawing the initial "discard", never detaching this syringe, then after drawing the sample into a syringe attached to the opposite site, the blood in the heparinized syringe is then reinfused. There is some evidence that reinfusing any blood is also reinfusing clots. I have never seen anything about the use of stopcocks decreasing infection, but there is some evidence that they increase infection because they are frequently left open and uncovered. LynnAt 2:22 PM -0500 8/8/06, Galloway, Margy wrote:Any opinions with the vascular access list experts?Margy, We have a practice question. Some of the H/O units are using a stopcock to draw labs. Their rationale is that it decreases the number of time they access the line- thus hopefully decreasing infection risk. Have you ever heard of this?Thanks for your help.MargySaint Luke's Health System Confidentiality Notice:
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