Current through Register Vol. 49, No. 18, September 16, 2024
PURPOSE: This rule establishes standards for
pediatric trauma center designation.
(1) General Standards for Pediatric Trauma
Center Designation.
(A) The pediatric trauma
center shall be located in a children's hospital or in a level I trauma
center.
(B) The hospital board of
directors, administration, medical staff and nursing staff shall demonstrate a
commitment to quality pedi-atric trauma care and shall treat any pediatric
trauma patient presented to the facility for care. Methods of demonstrating the
commitment shall include, but not be limited to, a board resolution that the
hospital governing body agrees to establish policies and procedures for the
maintenance of the services essential to a pediatric trauma center; assure that
all pediatric trauma patients will receive medical care that meets the
standards of this rule; commit the institution's financial, human and physical
resources as needed for the trauma program; and establish a priority for the
pediatric trauma patient to the full services of the institution.
(C) The hospital shall demonstrate evidence
of a pediatric trauma program that provides the trauma team with appropriate
experience to maintain skill and proficiency in the care of pediatric trauma
patients.
(D) The hospital shall
have a pediatric trauma team activation protocol that establishes the criteria
used to rank trauma victims according to the severity and type of injury and
identifies the persons authorized to notify trauma team members when a major
pedi-atric trauma patient is en route or has arrived at the pediatric trauma
center. That protocol shall provide for immediate notification and rapid
response requirements for trauma team members.
(E) There shall be a lighted helipad on the
hospital premises no more than three (3) minutes from the emergency
department.
(F) The hospital shall
appoint a board-certified pediatric surgeon to serve as pediatric trauma
medical director.
1. The pediatric trauma
medical director shall document a minimum average of sixteen (16) hours of
trauma-related continuing medical education (CME) every year.
2. There shall be a job description and
organizational chart depicting the relationship between the pediatric trauma
program director and other services.
(G) A registered nurse shall be appointed to
serve as the pediatric trauma nurse coordinator.
1. The pediatric trauma nurse coordinator
shall document a minimum average of twenty-four (24) hours of trauma-related
continuing nursing education every year.
2. There shall be a job description and
organization chart depicting the relationship between the pediatric trauma
nurse coordinator and other services.
(H) By the time of the initial review,
pedi-atric surgeons who comprise the pediatric surgical trauma call roster
shall have successfully completed or be registered for a provider advanced
trauma life support (ATLS) course.
(I) All members of the pediatric surgical
trauma call roster, including anesthesiology, shall document a minimum average
of eight (8) hours of trauma-related CME every year.
(J) The hospital shall be able to document
active involvement in local and regional emergency medical services (EMS)
systems. The hospital can demonstrate involvement in the local and regional EMS
programs by participating in EMS training programs and joint educational
programs regarding the pediatric patient; providing appropriate clinical
experience and EMS system quality assessment and quality assurance mechanisms;
and assisting in the development of regional policies and procedures.
(K) The hospital shall have a plan to notify
an organ or tissue procurement organization and cooperate in the procurement of
anatomical gifts in accordance with the provisions in section
194.233, RSMo.
(L) All pediatric trauma centers shall
support and fully participate in the Missouri trauma registry and shall belong
to the Missouri poison control network.
(2) Hospital Organization Standards for
Pediatric Trauma Center Designation.
(A)
Pediatric specialists representing the following specialties shall be on staff
at the center and shall be board-certified or board-admissible and credentialed
in trauma care: cardiac surgery, neurologic surgery, ophthalmic surgery, oral
surgery-dental, orthopedic surgery, otorhinolaryngologic surgery, pediatric
surgery; plastic and max-illofacial surgery, thoracic surgery and uro-logic
surgery. Obstetric and gynecologic surgeons shall be available on a consultant
basis.
(B) The emergency department
staffing shall ensure immediate and appropriate care of the pediatric trauma
patient. The emergency department pediatrician shall be board
certified/eligible in pediatric medicine and shall function as a designated
member of the pedi-atric trauma team. All emergency department physicians shall
have successfully completed and be current in ATLS and pediatric advanced life
support (PALS) course prior to the initial review and shall document a minimum
average of sixteen (16) hours of CME in trauma care every year. There shall be
written protocols to clearly establish responsibilities and define the
relationship between the emergency department pediatricians and other physician
members of the pediatric trauma team.
(C) The pediatric trauma surgeon on call
shall be physically present in-house twenty-four (24) hours a day and shall
meet all major trauma patients in the emergency department at the time of the
patient's arrival. This requirement may be fulfilled by senior residents in
general surgery who are ATLS-certified and able to deliver surgical treatment
immediately and provide control and leadership for care of the pediatric trauma
patient. When senior residents are used to fulfill availability requirements,
the pediatric trauma surgeon shall be immediately available.
(D) A neurosurgeon shall be available
in-house and dedicated to the hospital's pedi-atric trauma service. The
neurosurgeon requirement may be fulfilled by a surgeon experienced in the care
of pediatric patients with neural trauma and able to deliver surgical treatment
immediately and provide control and leadership for the care of the pedi-atric
patient with neural trauma.
(E)
Pediatric specialists representing the following specialties shall be on call
and promptly available: cardiac surgery, microsurgery, hand surgery, ophthalmic
surgery, oral surgery-dental, orthopedic surgery, otorhinolaryngologic surgery,
pediatric surgery, plastic and maxillofacial surgery, thoracic surgery and
urologic surgery.
(F) A
board-certified or board-admissible pediatrician credentialed in emergency care
shall be available in the emergency department twenty-four (24) hours a day.
This requirement may be fulfilled by a physician who is board-certified or
board-admissible in emergency medicine who demonstrates commitment by engaging
in the exclusive practice of pediatric emergency medicine a minimum of one
hundred (100) hours per month or has an additional year of training in
pediatric emergency medicine.
(G) A
board-certified or board-admissible anesthesiologist credentialed in pediatric
care shall be available in-house twenty-four (24) hours a day. Senior
anesthesiology residents or anesthesiologists not credentialed in pedi-atric
care may fulfill the in-house requirement if the credentialed pediatric
anesthesiologist is on call and promptly available.
(H) A pediatric radiologist shall be promptly
available twenty-four (24) hours a day.
(I) Pediatric specialists representing the
following non-surgical specialties shall be on call and available: cardiology,
chest medicine, gastroenterology, hematology, infectious diseases, nephrology,
neurology, pathology, psychiatry and neonatology.
(3) Standards for Special
Facilities/Resources/Capabilities for Pediatric Trauma Center Designation.
(A) Hospitals shall meet emergency department
standards for pediatric trauma center designation.
1. There shall be a minimum of two (2)
registered nurses per shift specializing in pediatric trauma care assigned to
the emergency department.
A. All registered
nurses regularly assigned to pediatric care in the emergency department shall
document a minimum of eight (8) hours per year of continuing nursing education
on care of the pediatric trauma patient.
B. All registered nurses regularly assigned
to pediatric care in the emergency department shall be PALS certified within
one (1) year of assignment to the unit and shall maintain a current PALS
certification.
2.
Respiratory therapy technicians who work with pediatric trauma patients in the
emergency department shall be experienced in pediatric respiratory therapy
techniques.
3. There shall be a
designated trauma resuscitation area in the emergency department equipped for
pediatric patients. Equipment to be immediately accessible for resuscitation
and to provide life support for the seriously injured pediatric patient shall
include, but not be limited to:
A. Airway
control and ventilation equipment for all size patients, including
laryngoscopes, assorted blades, airways, endotracheal tubes and bag-mask
resuscita-tor;
B. Oxygen, air and
suction devices;
C.
Electrocardiograph, monitor and defibrillator to include internal and external
pediatric paddles;
D. Apparatus to
establish central venous pressure monitoring and arterial monitoring;
E. All standard intravenous fluids and
administration devices, including intravenous catheters designed for delivering
IV fluids and medications at rates and in amounts appropriate for pediatric
patients;
F. Sterile surgical sets
for standard procedures for the emergency department;
G. Gastric lavage equipment;
H. Drugs and supplies necessary for emergency
care;
I. Two-way radio linked with
EMS vehicles;
J. Equipment for
spinal stabilization for all age groups;
K. Temperature control devices for patients,
parenteral fluids and blood;
L.
Blood pressure cuffs, chest tubes, nasogastric tubes and urinary drainage
apparatus for the pediatric patient; and
M. Patient weighing devices.
(B) The hospital shall
meet radiological capabilities for pediatric trauma center designation.
1. There shall be X-ray capability with
twenty-four (24)-hour coverage by in-house technicians.
2. There shall be radiological capabilities
promptly available, including general, peripheral and cerebrovascular
angiography, sonography and nuclear scanning.
3. Adequate physician and nursing personnel
shall be present with monitoring equipment to fully support the trauma patient
and provide documentation of care during the time that the patient is
physically present in the radiology department and during transportation to and
from the radiology department.
4.
There shall be in-house computerized tomography with a technician available
in-house twenty-four (24) hours a day. Mobile computerized tomography services,
contracts for those services with other institutions or computerized tomography
in remote areas of a hospital requiring transportation from the main hospital
building shall not be considered in-house.
5. The pediatric trauma surgeon,
neuro-surgeon and emergency pediatrician shall each have the authority to
initiate computerized tomography.
6. There shall be a continuing review of the
availability of computerized tomography services for the pediatric trauma
patient.
7. There shall be adequate
resuscitation equipment available to the radiology department.
(C) The hospital shall meet
pediatric intensive care unit standards for trauma center designation.
1. The medical director for the pediatric
intensive care unit (PICU) shall be board-certified or board-eligible in
pediatric critical care.
2. There
shall be a pediatrician or senior pediatric resident on duty in the PICU
twenty-four (24) hours a day or available from inside the hospital. This
physician shall maintain a current PALS certification. The physician on duty in
the PICU shall not be the emergency department pediatrician or the on-call
trauma surgeon.
3. The PICU patient
shall have nursing care by a registered nurse who is regularly assigned to
pediatric intensive care.
4. The
PICU shall utilize a patient classification system which defines the severity
of injury and indicates the number of registered nurses needed to staff the
unit. The minimum registered nurse/trauma patient ratio used shall be one to
two (1:2).
5. All registered nurses
regularly assigned to the PICU shall document a minimum of eight (8) hours per
year of continuing nursing education on care of the pediatric trauma
patient.
6. Within one (1) year of
assignment, all registered nurses regularly assigned to PICU shall be
PALS-certified. Registered nurses in pediatric trauma centers designated before
January 1, 1989 shall have successfully completed or be registered for a PALS
course by January 1, 1991.
7. There
shall be immediate access to clinical laboratory services.
8. Equipment to be immediately accessible for
resuscitation and life support for seriously injured pediatric patients shall
include, but not be limited to:
A. Airway
control and ventilation equipment for all size patients including
laryngoscopes, assorted blades, endotracheal tubes, bag-mask resuscitator and
mechanical ventilator;
B. Oxygen
and suction devices;
C.
Electrocardiograph, monitor and defibrillator, including internal and external
pediatric paddles;
D. Apparatus to
establish invasive hemodynamic monitoring, end tidal carbon dioxide monitoring
and pulse oximetry;
E. All standard
intravenous fluids and administration devices, including intravenous catheters
designed for delivering IV fluids and medications at rates and in amounts
appropriate for pediatric patients;
F. Gastric lavage equipment;
G. Drugs and supplies necessary for emergency
care;
H. Temporary transvenous
pacemaker;
I. Patient weighing
devices;
J. Cardiac output
monitoring devices;
K. Pulmonary
function measuring devices;
L.
Temperature control devices for the patient, parenteral fluids and
blood;
M. Intracranial pressure
monitoring devices;
N. Appropriate
emergency surgical trays; and
O.
Blood pressure cuffs, chest tubes, nasogastric tubes and urinary drainage
apparatus for the pediatric patient.
(D) The hospital shall meet post-anesthesia
recovery room (PAR) standards for pediatric trauma center designation. Unless
the hospital uses PICU to recover pediatric trauma patients, the following PA R
standards apply:
1. The post-anesthesia
recovery room shall be staffed with registered nurses regularly assigned to
pediatric care and other essential personnel on call and available twenty-four
(24) hours a day; and
2. Equipment
to be accessible for resuscitation and life support for the seriously injured
pediatric patient shall include, but not be limited to:
A. Airway control and ventilation equipment
for all size patients including laryngoscopes, assorted blades, airways,
endotracheal tubes and bag-mask resuscita-tor;
B. Oxygen and suction devices;
C. Electrocardiograph, monitor and
defibrillator, including internal and external pediatric paddles;
D. Apparatus to establish and maintain
hemodynamic monitoring;
E. All
standard intravenous fluids and administration devices, including intravenous
catheters designed for delivering IV fluids and medications at rates and in
amounts appropriate for pediatric patients;
F. Sterile surgical sets for emergency
procedures;
G. Drugs and supplies
necessary for emergency care;
H.
Temperature control devices for the patient, parenteral fluids and
blood;
I. Temporary transvenous
pacemaker; and
J. Electronic
pressure monitoring.
(E) The pediatric trauma center shall have
hemodialysis capability.
(F) The
pediatric trauma center shall have organized burn care or a written transfer
agreement.
(G) The pediatric trauma
center shall have spinal cord injury management capability or a written
transfer agreement.
(H) There shall
be documentation of adequate support services in assisting the patient's family
from the time of entry into the facility to the time of discharge.
(I) There shall be an operating room
adequately staffed in-house and available twenty-four (24) hours a day with a
back-up operating room staff on call and promptly available. Equipment for
resuscitation and to provide life support for the critically or seriously
injured pediatric patient shall include, but not be limited to:
1. Cardiopulmonary bypass
capability;
2. Operating
microscope;
3. Thermal control
equipment for patient, parenteral fluids and blood;
4. Endoscopes, all varieties;
5. Instruments necessary to perform an open
craniotomy;
6. Invasive and
noninvasive monitoring equipment;
7. Pediatric anesthesia equipment;
8. Cardiac output equipment;
9. Defibrillator and monitor, including
internal and external pediatric paddles; and
10. Blood pressure cuffs, chest tubes,
nasogastric tubes and urinary drainage apparatus for the pediatric
patient.
(J) Clinical
laboratory services shall be available twenty-four (24) hours a day. There
shall be a comprehensive blood bank and access to a community central blood
bank and adequate hospital storage facilities. There shall be provisions to
provide and receive the following laboratory test results twenty-four (24)
hours a day:
1. Microbiology;
2. Standard analyses of blood, urine and
other body fluids;
3. Blood typing
and cross-matching;
4. Coagulation
studies;
5. Blood gases and pH
determinations;
6. Serum and urine
osmolality; and
7. Drug and alcohol
screening.
(4) Standards for Programs in Quality
Assurance, Outreach, Public Education and Training for Pediatric Trauma Center
Designation.
(A) There shall be a special
audit of all trauma-related deaths. There shall be a mechanism in place to
review all deaths and identify primary admitted patients versus transferred
patients. Transferred patients shall be further identified as transferred after
stabilizing treatment or direct admission after prolonged treatment.
(B) There shall be a morbidity and mortality
review.
(C) There shall be a
regular multidisci-plinary trauma conference that includes all members of the
trauma team. Minutes of the conference shall include attendance, individual
cases reviewed and findings.
(D)
There shall be a medical and nursing quality assessment program and utilization
reviews and tissue reviews on a regular basis. Documentation of quality
assurance shall include problem identification, analysis, action plan,
documentation and location of action, implementation and
reevaluation.
(E) There shall be
twenty-four (24)-hour availability of telephone consultation with physicians in
the outlying areas.
(F) The
hospital shall demonstrate leadership in injury prevention in infants and
children.
(G) The hospital and its
staff shall document a research program in pediatric trauma.
(H) There shall be formal continuing
education programs in pediatric trauma and rehabilitation provided by the
hospital for staff physicians and nurses.
(I) The hospital shall provide programs in
continuing education for the area physicians, registered nurses and emergency
medical service providers concerning the treatment of the pediatric trauma
patient.
(5) Standards
for the Programs in Trauma Rehabilitation for Pediatric Trauma Center
Designation.
(A) The hospital shall have a
rehabilitation facility or a written transfer agreement with a rehabilitation
center which is specifically equipped for the care of children.
(B) The pediatric trauma rehabilitation team
shall develop and implement a procedure for discharge planning for the
pediatric trauma patient.
(C) The
pediatric trauma rehabilitation plan developed for the pediatric trauma patient
shall be under the direction of a physi-atrist or a physician with experience
in pedi-atric trauma rehabilitation.
(D) The hospital shall develop a plan to
document that there is adequate post-discharge follow-up on pediatric trauma
patients, including rehabilitation results where applicable. This shall include
identification of members of the rehabilitation team, discharge summary of
trauma care to the patient's private physician and documentation in the
patient's medical record of the post-discharge plan.
*Original authority: 190.185, RSMo 1973, amended 1989,
1993, 1995, 1998 and 190.241, RSMo 1987, amended
1998.