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Why Can't He Eat or Drink After Midnight? - March 2016 - Subscribe to Outpatient Surgery Magazine

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8. Have a transport plan in place. Make post-stabilization transport plans part of the simulation. It's crucial that every surgery center have a transport plan in place before an MH episode happens, and that every- one knows the transport plan. Depending on how far away you are from the receiving facility, I recommend that the anesthesia provider accompany the patient in the ambulance along with a sufficient amount of dantrolene. He should be able to give reports to the receiv- ing facility en route and continue to administer dantrolene, if needed. 9. Keep track of who's trained and who isn't. The Joint Commission recom- mends that you do simulations once a year. But if turnover is high or you have a lot of new people coming into your facility, keep it in mind and consider increasing the frequency of your drills to get new staff up to speed. 10. Rotate between scheduled drills and unscheduled ones. If your purpose is to educate, then you want drills to be scheduled. If your purpose is to assess readiness, you want them to be a surprise. I think it's a great idea to rotate between scheduled and unscheduled drills, and to have one of each every year. That will obviously be more time-con- suming than one drill a year, but it will also be more effective. 11. Have contingency plans. Keep in mind that the people you train might not be the people who are there if an episode happens in the middle of the night. Those are things that need to be discussed and planned for. Whom are you going to call or page? Are you going to bring people in from home or not? Contingency plans should be part of the simulation. OSM 9 8 • O U T PA T I E N T S U R G E R Y M A G A Z I N E • M A R C H 2 0 1 6 Dr. Shukry (mshukry@childrensomaha.org) is the chief of anesthesia at Children's Hospital in Omaha, Neb., and an associate professor in the Department of Anesthesiology at the University of Nebraska Medical Center.

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