1. Expert Consensus Guidelines for Stocking of Antidotes in Hospitals That Provide Emergency Care
- Author
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Richard C. Dart, Stephen W. Borron, E. Martin Caravati, Daniel J. Cobaugh, Steven C. Curry, Jay L. Falk, Lewis Goldfrank, Susan E. Gorman, Stephen Groft, Kennon Heard, Ken Miller, Kent R. Olson, Gerald O'Malley, Donna Seger, Steven A. Seifert, Marco L.A. Sivilotti, Tammi Schaeffer, Anthony J. Tomassoni, Robert Wise, Gregory M. Bogdan, Mohammed Alhelail, Jennie Buchanan, Jason Hoppe, Eric Lavonas, Sara Mlynarchek, Dong-Haur Phua, Sean Rhyee, Shawn Varney, and Amy Zosel
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Evidence-Based Medicine ,business.industry ,Drug Storage ,Antidotes ,Evidence-based medicine ,Pediatric critical care medicine ,medicine.disease ,Drug Utilization ,Health administration ,Pediatric emergency medicine ,Intensive care ,Medical toxicology ,Emergency Medicine ,medicine ,Emergency medical services ,Humans ,book.journal ,Medical emergency ,Hospital pharmacy ,Emergency Service, Hospital ,Pharmacy Service, Hospital ,Intensive care medicine ,business ,book - Abstract
We developed recommendations for antidote stocking at hospitals that provide emergency care.An expert panel representing diverse perspectives (clinical pharmacology, clinical toxicology, critical care medicine, clinical pharmacy, emergency medicine, internal medicine, pediatrics, poison centers, pulmonary medicine, and hospital accreditation) was formed to create recommendations for antidote stocking. Using a standardized summary of the medical literature, the primary reviewer for each antidote proposed guidelines for antidote stocking to the full panel. The panel used a formal iterative process to reach their recommendation for the quantity of an antidote that should be stocked and the acceptable period for delivery of each antidote.The panel recommended consideration of 24 antidotes for stocking. The panel recommended that 12 of the antidotes be available for immediate administration on patient arrival. In most hospitals, this period requires that the antidote be stocked in the emergency department. Another 9 antidotes were recommended for availability within 1 hour of the decision to administer, allowing the antidote to be stocked in the hospital pharmacy if the hospital has a mechanism for prompt delivery of antidotes. The panel identified additional antidotes that should be stocked by the hospital but are not usually needed within the first hour of treatment. The panel recommended that each hospital perform a formal antidote hazard vulnerability assessment to determine the need for antidote stocking in that hospital.The antidote expert recommendations provide a tool to be used in creating practices for appropriate and adequate antidote stocking in hospitals that provide emergency care.
- Published
- 2009