Lessons Learned from the Development and Demonstration of a PPE Inventory Monitoring System for US Hospitals

Read article published 9Nov 2021 here:

Abstract

An international system should be established to support personal protective equipment (PPE) inventory monitoring, particularly within the healthcare industry. In this article, the authors discuss the development and 15-week deployment of a proof-of-concept prototype that included the use of a Healthcare Trust Data Platform to secure and transmit PPE-related data. Seventy-eight hospitals participated, including 66 large hospital systems, 11 medium-sized hospital systems, and a single hospital. Hospitals reported near-daily inventory information for N95 respirators, surgical masks, and face shields, ultimately providing 159 different PPE model numbers. Researchers cross-checked the data to ensure the PPE could be accurately identified. In cases where the model number was inaccurately reported, researchers corrected the numbers whenever possible. Of the PPE model numbers reported, 74.2% were verified—60.5% of N95 respirators, 40.0% of face shields, and 84.0% of surgical masks. The authors discuss the need to standardize how PPE is reported, possible aspects of a PPE data standard, and standards groups who may assist with this effort. Having such PPE data standards would enable better communication across hospital systems and assist in emergency preparedness efforts during pandemics or natural disasters.

https://doi.org/10.1089/hs.2021.0098

CDC funds Vanderbilt analysis of US PPE trends

The CDC is funding research from Vanderbilt analyzing daily hospital personal protective equipment on-hand inventory to measure trends, patterns or statistically significant changes in supply in hospitals across the nation, according to a Nov. 17 press release.

“We’re conducting data analysis on a medical organization’s average consumption rates to figure out if they have enough PPE and other essential items to provide for their teams,” Kelly Aldrich, DNP, lead researcher and associate professor of nursing informatics, said in the release. 

The project is a follow up to a 2020 project Dr. Aldrich led with the Center for Medical Interoperability and the National Personal Protective Technology Laboratory, which connected 78 hospitals in nine federal Health and Human Services’ regions. 

The project will support the CDC’s National Personal Protective Technology Laboratory, dedicated to generating new knowledge in occupational safety and health. https://www.beckershospitalreview.com/supply-chain/cdc-funds-vanderbilt-analysis-of-us-ppe-trends.html

CDC taps School of Nursing Informaticist to analyze nation’s PPE supply

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is funding research led by Kelly Aldrich, DNP, FHIMSS, associate professor of nursing informatics, to analyze daily hospital personal protective equipment on-hand inventory to measure trends, patterns or statistically significant changes in PPE supply in the nation’s nearly 7,000 U.S. hospitals. The project will support the CDC’s National Personal Protective Technology Laboratory.

https://nursing.vanderbilt.edu/news/tag/ppe/

What a unique nurse identifier means for the future

Published in American Nurse September 15th, 2021

To improve patient survival in pediatric code blue resuscitations, the Center for Medical Interoperability (C4MI) is exploring the concept of using a holistic learning system to measure caregiver task performance with a time-stamped process and medical devices. Evidence suggests that the value of understanding team and individual clinician knowledge development, improvement, and application may help improve patient outcomes.

What a unique nurse identifier means for the future