Brenna Lawrence
University of California, San Diego
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Featured researches published by Brenna Lawrence.
Resuscitation | 2015
Daniel P. Davis; Patricia Graham; Ruchika Husa; Brenna Lawrence; Anushirvan Minokadeh; Katherine Altieri; Rebecca Sell
BACKGROUND Traditional resuscitation training models are inadequate to achieving and maintaining resuscitation competency. This analysis evaluates the effectiveness of a novel, performance improvement-based inpatient resuscitation programme. METHODS This was a prospective, before-and-after study conducted in an urban, university-affiliated hospital system. All inpatient adult cardiac arrest victims without an active Do Not Attempt Resuscitation order from July 2005 to June 2012 were included. The advanced resuscitation training (ART) programme was implemented in Spring 2007 and included a unique treatment algorithm constructed around the capabilities of our providers and resuscitation equipment, a training programme with flexible format and content including early recognition concepts, and a comprehensive approach to performance improvement feeding directly back into training. Our inpatient resuscitation registry and electronic patient care record were used to quantify arrest rates and survival-to-hospital discharge before and after ART programme implementation. Multiple logistic regression analysis was used to adjust for age, gender, location of arrest, initial rhythm, and time of day. RESULTS A total of 556 cardiac arrest victims were included (182 pre- and 374 post-ART). Arrest incidence decreased from 2.7 to 1.2 per 1000 patient discharges in non-ICU inpatient units, with no change in ICU arrest rate. An increase in survival-to-hospital discharge from 21 to 45% (p < 0.01) was observed following ART programme implementation. Adjusted odds ratios for survival-to-discharge (OR 2.2, 95% CI 1.4-3.4) and good neurological outcomes (OR 3.0, 95% CI 1.7-5.3) reflected similar improvements. Arrest-related deaths decreased from 2.1 to 0.5 deaths per 1000 patient discharges in non-ICU areas and from 1.5 to 1.3 deaths per 1000 patient discharges in ICU areas, and overall hospital mortality decreased from 2.2% to 1.8%. CONCLUSIONS Implementation of a novel, performance improvement-based inpatient resuscitation programme was associated with a decrease in the incidence of cardiac arrest and improved clinical outcomes.
Resuscitation | 2013
Daniel P. Davis; Rebecca Sell; Nathan Wilkes; Renee Sarno; Ruchika Husa; Edward M. Castillo; Brenna Lawrence; Roger Fisher; Criss Brainard; James V. Dunford
BACKGROUND Compression pauses may be particularly harmful following the electrical recovery but prior to the mechanical recovery from cardiopulmonary arrest. METHODS AND RESULTS A convenience sample of patients with out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OOHCA) were identified. Data were exported from defibrillators to define compression pauses, electrocardiogram rhythm, PetCO2, and the presence of palpable pulses. Pulse-check episodes were randomly assigned to a derivation set (one-third) and a validation set (two-thirds). Both an unweighted and a weighted receiver-operator curve (ROC) analysis were performed on the derivation set to identify optimal thresholds to predict ROSC using heart rate and PetCO2. A sequential decision guideline was generated to predict the presence of ROSC during compressions and confirm perfusion once compressions were stopped. The ability of this decision guideline to correctly identify pauses in which pulses were and were not palpated was then evaluated. A total of 145 patients with 349 compression pauses were included. The ROC analyses on the derivation set identified an optimal pre-pause heart rate threshold of >40 beats min(-1) and an optimal PetCO2 threshold of >20 mmHg to predict ROSC. A sequential decision guideline was developed using pre-pause heart rate and PetCO2 as well as the PetCO2 pattern during compression pauses to predict and rapidly confirm ROSC. This decision guideline demonstrated excellent predictive ability to identifying compression pauses with and without palpable pulses (positive predictive value 95%, negative predictive value 99%). The mean latency period between recovery of electrical and mechanical cardiac function was 78 s (95% CI 36-120 s). CONCLUSIONS Heart rate and PetCO2 can predict ROSC without stopping compressions, and the PetCO2 pattern during compression pauses can rapidly confirm ROSC. Use of a sequential decision guideline using heart rate and PetCO2 may reduce unnecessary compression pauses during critical moments during recovery from cardiopulmonary arrest.
Journal of Hospital Medicine | 2015
Daniel P. Davis; Steve A. Aguilar; Patricia Graham; Brenna Lawrence; Rebecca Sell; Anushirvan Minokadeh; Ruchika Husa
BACKGROUND In-hospital cardiopulmonary arrest (CPA) accounts for substantial morbidity and mortality. Rapid response teams (RRTs) are designed to prevent non-intensive care unit (ICU) CPA through early detection and intervention. However, existing evidence has not consistently demonstrated a clear benefit. OBJECTIVE To explore the effectiveness of a novel RRT program design to decrease non-ICU CPA and overall hospital mortality. METHODS This study was conducted from the start of fiscal year 2005 to 2011. In November 2007, our hospitals implemented RRTs as part of a novel resuscitation program. Charge nurses from each inpatient unit underwent training as unit-specific RRT members. Additionally, all inpatient staff received annual training in RRT concepts including surveillance and recognition of deterioration. We compared the incidence of ICU and non-ICU CPA from first complete preimplementation year 2006 to postimplementation years 2007 to 2011. Overall hospital mortality was also reported. RESULTS The incidence of non-ICU CPA decreased, whereas the incidence of ICU CPA remained unchanged. Overall hospital mortality also decreased (2.12% to 1.74%, P < 0.001). The year-over-year change in RRT activations was inversely related to the change in Code Blue activations for each inpatient unit (r = -0.68, P < 0.001). CONCLUSION Our novel RRT program was associated with a decreased incidence of non-ICU CPA and improved hospital mortality.
The Joint Commission Journal on Quality and Patient Safety | 2018
Daniel P. Davis; Steve A. Aguilar; Brenna Lawrence; Anushirvan Minokadeh; Rebecca Sell; Ruchika Husa
BACKGROUND Efforts to reduce preventable deaths in the in-hospital setting should target both cardiopulmonary arrest (CPA) prevention and optimal resuscitation. This requires consideration of a broad range of clinical issues and processes. A comprehensive, integrated system of care (SOC) that links data collection with a modular education program to reduce preventable deaths has not been defined. METHODS This study was conducted in two urban university hospitals from 2005 to 2009. The Advanced Resuscitation Training (ART) program was implemented in 2007, incorporating hands-on resuscitative skills and in-hospital-specific training with an institutional resuscitation database. Linkage between the database and training modules occurs via the ART Matrix, which classifies all CPA events into the following etiologies: sepsis, hemorrhage, pulmonary embolus, heart failure, tachyarrhythmias, bradyarrhythmias, acute respiratory distress syndrome, non-intubated pulmonary disease, obstructive apnea, traumatic brain injury, ischemic brain injury, and intracranial mass lesions. This taxonomy was validated using descriptive statistics, before-and-after analysis evaluating CPA incidence, and multivariate logistic regression to predict CPA survival. RESULTS A total of 336 inpatients suffered a cardiopulmonary arrest during the study period-187 in the pre-ART period and 149 in the post-ART period. The vast majority of CPA events were categorized using the ART Matrix with high inter-observer reliability. As anticipated, changes in CPA incidence and survival were observed for some Matrix categories but not others following ART implementation. In addition, multivariate logistic regression revealed strong independent associations between taxonomy classifications and outcome. CONCLUSION A novel SOC using a unique taxonomy for arrest classification appears to be effective at reducing inpatient CPA incidence and outcome.
Resuscitation | 2010
Rebecca Sell; Renee Sarno; Brenna Lawrence; Edward M. Castillo; Roger Fisher; Criss Brainard; James V. Dunford; Daniel P. Davis
Circulation | 2009
Rebecca Sell; Brenna Lawrence; Daniel P. Davis
Critical Care Medicine | 2016
Patricia Graham; Anita Oh; Halsey Barlow; Ruth W Chappell; Brenna Lawrence; Rebecca Sell
Circulation | 2011
Morgan C Ludington; Patricia Graham; Brenna Lawrence; Rebecca Sell; Ruchika Husa; Anush Minokadeh; Daniel P. Davis
Circulation | 2009
Rebecca Sell; Nathan Wilkes; Renee Sarno; Brenna Lawrence; Roger Fisher; Jeff Clyons; James Dunford; Daniel P. Davis
Circulation | 2009
Rebecca Sell; Renee Sarno; Brenna Lawrence; Roger Fisher; Jeff Clyons; James Dunford; Daniel P. Davis