Specialized Vascular Access Teams

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Abstract

Patients admitted to hospital are exposed to invasive procedures and will receive various interventions from different professional roles all with different levels of experience: some with limited experience and some with extensive experience. In simple terms, an orthopaedic surgeon fixes your broken bones, a cardiologist attends to your heart, a geriatrician focuses on elderly patient care, and a vascular surgeon focuses on vascular surgery. Yet, which vascular access device is inserted influences the clinical outcomes within each of these select specialties. Insertion procedures and care and maintenance are shared by a variety of healthcare professional disciplines, all with a variety of experience, guided by local policy frameworks. Because of this interdisciplinary sharing, responsibility becomes fragmented, and ownership of outcomes is lacking leading to increased patient safety risks. This chapter will firstly identify the various definitions that make up a vascular access specialist team (VAST) and secondly the variety of evidence supporting the concept and what empirical guidelines say about it. Finally, it explores the use of a vascular access specialist teams to promote unity in patient care and assurance that only well-trained clinicians who are qualified to select, insert and care for VADs can do so, promoting greater patient safety and positive patient outcomes.

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APA

Carr, P. J., & Moureau, N. L. (2019). Specialized Vascular Access Teams. In Vessel Health and Preservation: The Right Approach for Vascular Access (pp. 59–65). Springer International Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-03149-7_5

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