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A proposal to reduce biliary track drainage catheter slippage rate in the medical ward
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Journal of Advanced Practices in Nursing

ISSN: 2573-0347

Open Access

A proposal to reduce biliary track drainage catheter slippage rate in the medical ward


38th Asia-Pacific Nursing and Medicare Summit

OCTOBER 03-04, 2018 OSAKA, JAPAN

Shu-Chen Chi, Pei-Chen Hsieh and Shih-Min Lu

Changhua Christian Hospital, Taiwan

Posters & Accepted Abstracts: Adv Practice Nurs

Abstract :

Patients with an obstructed or an infected biliary tract are easily susceptible to biliary disease. This condition must be treated timely using a biliary tract drainage catheter to avoid life-threatening complications. Such treatment can help the patient to maintain smooth flow of the bile, thereby avoiding septic shock that endangers the health and safety of the patient. Therefore, the biliary tract drainage catheter must be placed in the biliary tract on time for treating this disease. In our Gastrointestinal (GI) ward, patients with biliary disease generally undergo in situ drainage. Recently, we have been observing a high slippage rate of biliary tract drainage catheter, which not only endangers the safety of the patientâ??s health but also prolongs the treatment time. Therefore, a team was formed to improve this condition, which identified the following problems: that the drainage catheter needs improvement in the fixing methods, differences existed in the biliary tract drainage catheter, the drainage catheter could be pulled out easily, there was a lack of a standard process for uniform fixing of the drainage catheter, and there was a lack of an audit system. When the team had analyzed and established the problem, few measures were proposed, which included simplifying the drainage catheter fixation procedure, unifying the drainage catheter fixation dressing, implementing the use of pins to fix the pipeline, revising the drainage catheter care procedure, and checking the implementation of the pipeline care effectiveness regularly. After implementing these administrative protocols, the drainage catheter slippage rate decreased from 3.6% to 0.5%, thereby indicating that the purpose of this project has been achieved. The implementation of these administrative protocols not only paved the way to use the projectâ??s achievements in clinical care but also alerted us to be more cautious for preventing drainage catheter slippage, reducing patient injury, and improving the quality of care whenever there is a need to provide drainage catheters by the nursing staff.

Biography :

Shu-Chen Chi has graduated from Central Taiwan University of Science and Technology. She is the Nursing Staff in the Acute Stage GI Medical Ward at Changhua Christian Hospital and has been working since 20 years.

E-mail: 69536@cch.org.tw

 

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