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Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews

Vascular access specialist teams for device insertion and prevention of failure

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Información

DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1002/14651858.CD011429Copiar DOI
Base de datos:
  1. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews
Versión publicada:
  1. 15 diciembre 2014see what's new
Tipo:
  1. Intervention
Etapa:
  1. Protocol
Grupo Editorial Cochrane:
  1. Grupo Cochrane de Anestesia

Copyright:
  1. Copyright © 2014 The Cochrane Collaboration. Published by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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Autores

  • Peter J Carr

    Correspondencia a: Emergency Medicine, School of Primary, Aboriginal and Rural Health Care, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Health Services, The University of Western Australia, Nedlands, Australia

    [email protected]

    [email protected]

    NHMRC Centre of Research Excellence in Nursing, Centre for Health Practice Innovation, Griffith Health Institute, Griffith University, Brisbane, Australia

  • Niall S Higgins

    NHMRC Centre of Research Excellence in Nursing, Centre for Health Practice Innovation, Griffith Health Institute, Griffith University, Brisbane, Australia

    Metro North Mental Health, Royal Brisbane and Women’s Hospital, Metro North Hospital and Health Service, Brisbane, Australia

  • Marie L Cooke

    NHMRC Centre of Research Excellence in Nursing, Centre for Health Practice Innovation, Griffith Health Institute, Griffith University, Brisbane, Australia

  • Gabor Mihala

    NHMRC Centre of Research Excellence in Nursing, Centre for Health Practice Innovation, Griffith Health Institute, Griffith University, Brisbane, Australia

    School of Medicine, Griffith Health Institute, Griffith University, Meadowbrook, Australia

  • Claire M Rickard

    NHMRC Centre of Research Excellence in Nursing, Centre for Health Practice Innovation, Griffith Health Institute, Griffith University, Brisbane, Australia

Contributions of authors

Conceiving the review: Peter J Carr (PC), Claire M Rickard (CR).

Co‐ordinating the review: PC.

Undertaking manual searches: PC, Niall S Higgins (NH).

Screening search results: PC, NH.

Organizing retrieval of papers: PC, NH.

Screening retrieved papers against inclusion criteria: PC, NH.

Appraising quality of papers: PC, NH.

Abstracting data from papers: PC, NH.

Writing to authors of papers for additional information: PC.

Providing additional data about papers: PC, NH.

Obtaining and screening data on unpublished studies: PC, NH.

Data management for the review: PC, NH, Gabor Mihala (GM).

Entering data into Review Manager 5 (RevMan 2014): PC, NH, GM, Marie L Cooke (MC).

Review Manager 5 statistical data: PC, NH, GM.

Other statistical analysis not using Review Manager 5: GM.

Interpretation of data: PC, NH, MC, GM, CR.

Statistical inferences: PC, GM.

Writing the review: PC, NH, MC, CR.

Securing funding for the review: PC, CR.

Performing previous work that was the foundation of the present study: PC, CR.

Guarantor for the review: PC.

Reading and checking review before submission: PC, NH, MC, GM, CR.

Declarations of interest

Peter J Carr has received "speakers bureau" payment form CareFusion in 2013 and Becton Dickinson (BD) in 2014 for lectures on the subject of vascular access. He received a grant from CareFusion (facilitated by his institution at the time) to attend a scientific meeting on vascular access in the USA in 2012. He has received a part‐funded PhD Scholarship from BD with no funding for the review, with no influence over the design topic of the PhD or review. All of the aforementioned will not bias or influence this review.

Niall S Higgins has no conflicts of interest to declare.

Marie L Cooke has no conflicts of interest to declare.

Gabor Mihala has no conflicts of interest to declare.

Claire M Rickard is an academic researcher and speaker in the field of vascular access. Griffith University (not Prof Rickard) has received payments from manufacturers of intravenous (IV) catheters and related equipment for her to give educational lectures (3M, Bard, BBraun, BD, Carefusion, Mayo) and for one consultancy research project on the topic of a simulated time‐in‐motion study on flushing of IV catheters (BD, Keogh 2014). Griffith University (not Prof Rickard) has also received unrestricted, grant‐in‐aid donations from manufacturers of IV catheters and related equipment (3M, BD, Centurion, Carefusion) to 1. support Prof Rickard's independent research, and 2. to support travel costs for research assistants and research students to present their independent research at conferences. Prof Rickard has not undertaken any research specifically into IV teams (the topic of this review). Rickard has published government funded research that identified IV team/expert insertion as one of many factors statistically linked to fewer IV catheter complications (Wallis 2014).

Acknowledgements

We would like to thank Jane Cracknell, Cochrane Anaesthesia Review Group (CARG) Managing Editor for editorial guidance in preparing this protocol and all the peer reviewers for their time and effort in evaluating and critiquing this protocol for the systematic review. We would like to acknowledge Karen Hovhannisyan (CARG Trials Search Co‐ordinator) for assistance with the MEDLINE search strategy. We would like to thank Bronagh Blackwood (content editor); Nathan Pace (statistical editor); and Nancy Moureau, Linda Kelly, and Evan Alexandrou (peer reviewers) for their help and editorial advice during the preparation of this protocol for the systematic review.

Version history

Published

Title

Stage

Authors

Version

2018 Mar 20

Vascular access specialist teams for device insertion and prevention of failure

Review

Peter J Carr, Niall S Higgins, Marie L Cooke, Gabor Mihala, Claire M Rickard

https://doi.org/10.1002/14651858.CD011429.pub2

2014 Dec 15

Vascular access specialist teams for device insertion and prevention of failure

Protocol

Peter J Carr, Niall S Higgins, Marie L Cooke, Gabor Mihala, Claire M Rickard

https://doi.org/10.1002/14651858.CD011429

Keywords

MeSH

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH) Keywords

Medical Subject Headings Check Words

Humans;

PICO

Population
Intervention
Comparison
Outcome

El uso y la enseñanza del modelo PICO están muy extendidos en el ámbito de la atención sanitaria basada en la evidencia para formular preguntas y estrategias de búsqueda y para caracterizar estudios o metanálisis clínicos. PICO son las siglas en inglés de cuatro posibles componentes de una pregunta de investigación: paciente, población o problema; intervención; comparación; desenlace (outcome).

Para saber más sobre el uso del modelo PICO, puede consultar el Manual Cochrane.