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Research


 

Research at the National Flight Nurse Academy

Building the Evidence Base for Practice




Broselow Tape


Potential Underdosing

ACNP/Flight Nurse, Carolyn Nieman recently discovered that sometimes motherhood is the mother of invention. Ms. Nieman, who works as a flight nurse specialist for Metro Life Flight and is a member of the CASE faculty. Three years ago, while watching her thirteen-year-old daughter and ten-year-old son perform at a school concert, she first thought of the idea that the Broselow Tape may underestimate children's size. Soon afterward, she began devising a way to improve on the “Broselow Tape” method traditionally used in emergency medical situations involving children requiring resuscitation. The method is used to estimate medication dosing and equipment sizing based on a child’s age and body size. “I always thought my kids were normal size, but that night they seemed so much smaller than everyone else on stage,” she says. “So when I came to work, I started thinking there’s no way that the Broselow Tape can be accurate anymore, and it became more clear to me everywhere I went that kids seemed bigger and bigger.”

Environmental Cues


Situational Awareness

Situational awareness is a key factor in preparedness for emergencies. The range of sensory cues identified in this observational and interview study include six categories of cues. They are visual, acoustic, vibration, air current, thermal, and smell. Examples of sensory cues identified include VISUAL: observation of treatment provided by first responders, wind direction, fireworks being launched into the air, shadows of poles and trees that were not themselves visible, blinking lights that might indicate the presence of obstruction of "steady" light sources, damage to vehicles and buildings, the inability to visualize, monitor power failure, estimating the size of confined spaces; ACOUTSIC: inability to hear change in breath sounds (thus choosing to electively place chest tube for 50 mL hemothorax), noise produced by generators, fire trucks and extrication tools, rotor sound; THERMAL: air temperature and temperature of fluids during fluid resuscitation; SMELL: smell of jet fuel (potential emergency condition) versus jet exhaust (time signal on close approach). The sensory cues identified will be used to develop a "synthetic natural environment" to conduct training of advanced practice nurses and to conduct clinical research using simulated patients under a wide range of environmental conditions.