1 / 26

Poison Control Center

Outline. HistoryIntroduction Comparison between PCC and DICTelephone Protocol for handling Poison Calls. History. 1953 The establishment of the First PCC1958 Formation of American Association of Poison Control Center (AAPCC)1960 600 poison center in the USA . 2007 Annual Report of t

lisle
Télécharger la présentation

Poison Control Center

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


    1. Poison Control Center Lobna AL Juffali

    2. Outline History Introduction Comparison between PCC and DIC Telephone Protocol for handling Poison Calls

    3. History 1953 The establishment of the First PCC 1958 Formation of American Association of Poison Control Center (AAPCC) 1960 600 poison center in the USA

    4. 2007 Annual Report of the American Association of Poison Control Centers National Poison Data System (NPDS): 25th Annual Report Over 4.2 million calls were captured by NPDS in 2007 2,482,041 human exposure calls, 1,602,489 information requests, 131,744 nonhuman exposure calls. Substances involved most frequently in were analgesics (12.5% of all exposures).

    5. 2007 Annual Report of the American Association of Poison Control Centers National Poison Data System (NPDS): 25th Annual Report The most common exposures in children less than age 6 were cosmetics/personal care products (10.7% of pediatric exposures). Drug identification requests comprised 66.8% of all information calls. NPDS documented 1,597 human fatalities.

    6. Poison Control Centers PCC were established for two reasons: To provide rapid access to information valuable in assessing and treating poisonings. To assist with poisoning prevention

    7. Functions Assess and treatment recommendations during poisoning via 24-hour emergency telephone services Provide public and professional educational programs To collect data on poisonings To perform research Assist the public and health care providers during hazardous material spills

    8. Staffing Medical director ( physician with interest and expertise in medical toxicology) duties include Protocol review and approval Audit of poison center recommendations Availability for consultation on difficult cases Administrative director 5-6 full time specialists Pharmacists Nurses Physicians One year experience answered at least 2000 calls Exam Public education Coordinator

    9. Poison Center Certification AAPCC provides a program That certifies regional poison centers: Designation by appropriate public health officials Demonstration that the center is used appropriately throughout the region adequate staffing by specialist Demonstration of the role of the physician

    10. Poison Center Certification Medical director in the operation of the center Adequate training and experience of an administrative director Demonstration of adequate programs in professional and public education Participation in the AAPCC data collection

    11. Comparison Between DIC and PCC Both have a common goal provide comprehensive, accurate, and timely information to their clients Both used the information to enhance the medical care of patients Both have similar information retrieval process and physical layouts Despite these similarities, there are a number of important differences between the two services

    12. Comparison Between DIC and PCC (Contd) Clientele : Public vs. health care professionals Eighty eight percent of PCC calls came from public Nine to 10 perecnt of DIC calls came from public

    13. Comparison Between DIC and PCC (Contd) Call Volume : Exteremily large from public versus health care professionals. Average is 103 calls per day (human exposure only) Range is 33 to 213 calls per day

    14. Comparison Between DIC and PCC (Contd) Administrative differences Hours of Operation/Cost : PCC operates 24 hrs a day year-round vs. 9 AM to 5 PM PCC requires large staffs compare to DIC PCC is more expensive to operate than DIC

    15. Comparison Between DIC and PCC (Contd) Administrative differences Staffing : PCC relies not only on pharmacist but also on other health care professionals (nurses, physicians, technicians) Nurses worked 52% of the total phone hours in 1993 Pharmacists and physicans worked 36% and 3% of the total hours, respectively

    16. Comparison Between DIC and PCC (Contd) Procedural differences Response Time : All PCC calls require an immediate response Time is related to the efficacy of the therapeutic interventions The average response time is 5 min. in PCC vs. 15 - 30 min DIC

    17. Comparison Between DIC and PCC (Contd) Procedural differences Call complexity : PCC calls are less complex than DIC calls Most poisoning patients rarely have complex medical history Poisoning agents re-occur constantly from year-to-year PCC is the first point of contact by public and health professsionals

    18. Comparison Between DIC and PCC (Contd) Procedural difference References: PCC assess and make treatment recommendation for any potential poison (medication, chemical, household, biological, natural toxin). But DIC handle medication- and pharmacy-related inquires PCC will often have a broader base reference collection than DIC

    19. Comparison Between DIC and PCC (Contd) Procedural difference Documentaion: Documentation helps in developing a data system General Epidemiological Data (date & time of call, reason of exposure) Caller characteristics (site of call) Patient characteristics (age, gender, pregnancy status)

    20. Comparison Between DIC and PCC (Contd) Procedural difference Documentaion:(Contd) Exposure characteristics (substance, route and site of exposure) Clinical course (Clinical manifestation, medical outcomes) Medical management characteristics(Therapeutic intervention)

    21. Considerations of PCC Facility considerations : Location (near ER, medical library, hospital pharmacy) Work space and environment Equipment : Telephone system (direct with enough lines) PC computer system and/or local area network (LAN) Modem and facsimile machine Internet access Other (such as file cabinets, refrigerators, microwave)

    22. Considerations of PCC (Contd) Resources : Two factors should be available in PCC The experience and training of the specialist The quality of the information available to the specialist.

    23. Considerations of PCC (Contd) Resources : Micromedexs Poisindex (a database of more than 800,000 household products, chemicals, and medications) Clinical Toxicology of Commercial Products General clinical toxicology texts Specialized toxicology texts Internal protocol for handling certain poisons Primary literature (case report) On-call medical support and experts in the area

    24. Considerations of PCC (Contd) Policy and Procedures : Different than DIC in almost all aspects Handling intentional exposure Long term public education program Release of PCC tape recording Telephone system repair

    25. Telephone Protocol For Handling Poison Calls I .Initial assessment Substance Symptoms What has been done II. History Basic information Substance Amount Symptoms III. Assessment Toxicity of the substance Circumstances of exposure Competency of the caller

    26. Telephone Protocol For Handling Poison Calls IV. Treatment plan (one of the following) No treatment First aid and observe at home Syrup of ipecac and observe at home Refer t o MD, ER,etc V. Follow up Made at 0.5 hr,2-4hrs,12hrsor 24hrs Has the victim remained asymptomatic Were instructions followed Was treatment effective Poison prevention teaching Referral

More Related