Incidents and Adverse Events



Incidents and Adverse Events






Suspected outbreaks

Suspected outbreaks may be associated with infections, biological agents, or poisonings (chemical, nutritional, or radioactive). Suspicious circumstances include: intelligence of a threat, multiple cases, simultaneous outbreaks elsewhere, and illness affecting a particular community.


Presentation and assessment



  • Illnesses which do not fit any recognizable clinical condition.


  • A known illness that is not expected in the setting where observed, or follows an unexpected course.

Illnesses that should arouse suspicion include:



  • Clusters (>2) of patients with similar symptoms.


  • Signs and symptoms inappropriate to patient’s history/location.


  • Signs/symptoms of syndromes/toxidromes (see image p.452), such as:



    • Cholinergic activity: see image p.480 (G and V nerve agents)


    • Respiratory symptoms: chest tightness, pulmonary oedema, associated eye irritation (phosgene, chlorine, mustard gases)


    • Unexplained severe metabolic acidosis (cyanides)


    • Skin blistering, unexplained ‘thermal’ type burns


    • Fever with paralysis, mediastinal lymphadenopathy, or haemorrhagic thrombocytopaenia, see image pp.358 and 370 (anthrax, VHFs, tularaemia, pneumonic plague)


    • Aplastic anaemia, hair loss, severe GI loss


Investigations

For biological agent exposure, the following samples may be requested:



  • Serum and whole blood EDTA (paired sample if recovery occurs).


  • Blood cultures (at least 1 sample prior to antibiotics if possible).


  • Sputum or bronchoalveolar lavage (if safe to do so).


  • Biopsy or aspiration samples of necrotic lesions or vesicles (vesicle swabs should be placed in viral transport medium).


  • Pus and/or swabs (take multiple samples).


  • Urine and other body fluids.


  • Stool or vomitus sample (if food contamination suspected).

Take HPA advice on sample precautions. The specimen should be labelled with surname/forename/DOB, and transported to a clinical microbiology laboratory as soon as possible.


Further actions



  • Decontaminate before ICU admission; if unsure contact the HPA.


  • Make list of all staff who may have been exposed; treat waste, property and samples as hazardous until advised otherwise.


  • Use personal protective equipment as advised by HPA; if uncertain, use gloves, gown, cap, mask and eye protection (see image p.384 for instructions on how to don protective equipment in high-risk cases).


  • Give appropriate treatments where they are available:



    • Chemical poisoning: atropine and oximes, see image p.480


    • Cyanide, see image p.458


    • Anthrax/plague, see image p.358


    • Tularaemia: doxycycline



    • VHFs, see image p.370)


    • Radiation: potassium iodide may be appropriate; in cases of internal exposure: chelation, ion exchange, or lavage may be possible



Further reading

Health Protection Agency. CBRN incidents: clinical management and health protection. London: HPA, 2005.

Health Protection Agency. Initial investigation and management of outbreaks and incidents of unusual illnesses: A guide for health professionals, 2010. Available at: image <http://www.hpa.org.uk/webc/HPAwebFile/HPAweb_C/1201265888951>.

White SM. Chemical and biological weapons. Implications for anaesthesia and intensive care. Br J Anaesth 2002; 89(2): 306-24.






Fig. 15.1 Algorithm for the management of outbreaks. Reproduced with permission from the Health Protection Agency.



Major incidents

A major incident may be external (a disaster in the community) or internal (e.g. a fire). It is loosely defined as any incident that generates sufficient numbers/types of casualties as to require special arrangements.

Every hospital (and ICU) should have a major incident plan of which staff should be aware. A major incident should trigger involvement of senior management within the hospital to co-ordinate an effective response from different clinical departments. ICU staff may have to work closely with operating theatres, A&E, and other high dependency areas within the same hospital and/or other hospitals.

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Jun 13, 2016 | Posted by in CRITICAL CARE | Comments Off on Incidents and Adverse Events

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