A hospital shall have a surgically-directed and staffed Pediatric Intensive Care Unit (PICU) in order to be designated as a Level I trauma center.
Each pediatric trauma care facility shall designate a surgical director or surgical co-director for the PICU.
The pediatric trauma service that assumes initial responsibility for the care of an injured patient shall maintain that responsibility as long as the patient remains critically ill. The surgeon in charge shall remain in that role even if the patient requires admission to a pediatric intensive care unit (PICU).
Medical and surgical specialists shall be consulted as needed to provide specific expertise in the care of the patient in the PICU. The surgical PICU service physician shall be in-house twenty-four (24) hours per day in Level I facilities.
The surgeon team leader in a pediatric trauma care facility shall have obtained critical care training during residency or fellowship and must have expertise in the perioperative and postinjury care of the critically injured patient. The surgeon team leader shall possess a Certificate of Added Qualifications in Surgical Critical Care from the American Board of Surgery, or have documented active participation during the preceding twelve (12) months in PICU administration and quality improvement activities, and direct involvement in the PICU care of trauma patients.
Each PICU shall have a physician with privileges in critical care and approved by the Surgical Critical care service Director on duty in the PICU twenty-four (24) hours a day or immediately available in the hospital.
The clinical nurse manager for a PICU shall be responsible for those aspects of administration that pertain to nursing in the unit and for quality improvement in nursing. He or she shall hold certification as a Critical Care Nurse (CCRN) or have evidence of equivalent critical care training.
Each nurse assigned to trauma patients shall be a registered nurse, and shall hold certification as a CCRN or have evidence of equivalent critical care training from the American Association of Critical Care Nurses. Before assuming responsibility for patients in the PICU, each nurse shall be oriented to the care of the critically ill trauma patient. Each nurse shall complete at least eight (8) hours of Continuing Medical Education each year.
The course work for nurses identified in §§ 2810.7 and 2810.8 shall cover mechanisms of injury in traumatized individuals, fluid and electrolyte balance, pressure monitoring, ventilator management, and infection control. It shall also provide an overview of aspects of operative treatment of specific injuries.
PICU nursing staff shall be maintained at a level that insures a nurse patient ratio of one to two (1:2) on each shift and shall be increased above this as dictated by patient acuity.
Each PICU shall have support personnel available as follows:
Equipment in the PICU shall include, but not be limited to, the following:
Each pediatric trauma care facility shall provide a PICU physician on duty twenty-four (24) hours per day. This coverage may be provided by the patient's primary physician or by a physician who is credentialed in critical care by the hospital. This coverage for emergencies is not intended to replace the primary surgeon in caring for the patient in the PICU; it is to ensure that the patient's immediate needs will be met while the primary surgeon is being contacted.
Each pediatric trauma care facility ICU shall provide or have immediately available the following equipment:
Each PICU in a pediatric trauma care facility shall be concentrated in a single unit or in contiguous units. Trauma PICU beds on floors different from the operating rooms must have ready access to a nearby elevator that is immediately available for emergency transport. The elevator facilities shall be adequate to ensure immediate transport of the patient and all needed ancillary equipment between the operating rooms and the PICU, and shall be situated to facilitate the transport of the critically ill patient to special procedure departments.
All PICU beds shall have bedside monitoring capabilities for central venous, pulmonary arterial, systemic arterial, and intracranial pressure monitoring. All beds shall have piped-in air and oxygen and adequate space for a mechanical ventilator, and at least every other bed shall have a sink. At least one bed shall have the space and water drainage capabilities adequate to support a bedside hemodialysis unit. All beds shall have lighting adequate for performance of minor operative procedures such as chest-tube insertion and central venous puncture.
Sleeping quarters for the physician who is immediately responsible for the patients in the trauma PICU shall be located near or within the unit. A quiet room nearby, but separate from the unit, shall be available for discussions with family members. Space also shall be available near the PICU for educational activities for physicians, nurses, and support personnel.
Each pediatric trauma care facility shall have access to clinical diagnostic services for essential laboratory evaluations and diagnostics such as blood gases measurement, hematoerit levels, serum potassium values, and chest X-rays within thirty (30) minutes of a request. This capability shall be continuously monitored by the quality improvement program.
Each Level I facility shall investigate the pathophysiology and treatment of the critically injured pediatric patient.
D.C. Mun. Regs. tit. 22, r. 22-B2810