00:03:20 Lisa Gray: Welcome to the nurse break out room! If you joined this room by accident and need a different link, just put it in the chat. 00:10:03 Lisa Hill: I have been doing this for about 14 years (paramedic and former NICU nurse). I was a EMS manager and was able to make this required for our critical care paramedics. I also took a gallon plastic bag, added a hat, 3 way stop cock, and a couple of real baby blankets. Are your paramedics able to do emergency umbilical lines in your state? Michigan denied my request for NRP certified paramedics to be able to. 00:10:49 Kristen Colsden: is it possible for the Host to mute all participants? There is some background noise 00:14:30 Brighan DeFazio: Do you advocate for ENPC or PALS for emergency room staff or both? Currently our emergency room staff take ENPC. We are potentially looking to have them become PALS certified. 00:15:05 Danielle(Summit Healthcare): all staff must be PALS certified ENPC is recommended. 00:15:15 Caitlin: we do PALS required and ENPC as optional 00:15:57 Brighan DeFazio: Can you tell me which type of organization you work at? Thanks for the response 00:16:16 Tibor Bajor: both are excellent 00:17:09 Amy Mathes: I am a new manager of a critical access ED. We require PALS and I would like to start sending my nurses to ENPC. 00:17:17 Danielle(Summit Healthcare): Rural hospital 00:17:54 Robbie Besel: Staff need to have ACLS, PALS, TNCC and ENPC although some of the requirements have been waived due to staffing shortages, we are trying to get all the providers and nurses in ER through NRP. 00:18:23 Michelle Moegling: We request all staff in our children's and community ED's have PALS and our Childrens hospital is starting an ENPC program 00:20:27 jillian walsh chla: Our ability to do annual competencies have also been affected by staffing shortage this year. We were unable to do them. 00:21:19 Erin Patisteas: We are trying to build a program to have a yearly pedi skills fair (over a week) and then monthly focused skills learning opportunities. 00:21:43 Caitlin: Same here- struggling with staff shortages. I have held skills labs as a "drop in" so that staff can drop in when its convenient for staff 00:21:55 Andrea Pace: We're requesting NRP for our Children's ED. Main ED and two freestanding ED's. Our barrier right now is funding. 00:22:12 Laura Garcia: In LA County EDAP, we require all nurses, RTs, PAs, NPs to be PALS certified and ED docs to be board certified. We also have 14 hours of pediatric education required every four years. 00:22:45 Rachel Wedin: Prior to COVID we were doing annual trainings and semi annual mock codes. Havne.t been able to restart due to staffing and COVID restrictions 00:22:55 Laura Garcia: At our facility we have quarterly education and incorporate pediatric education/competencies and QI at each quarterly. 00:24:27 lfrederking: We have yearly competencies, staff is required to have NRP and PALS. We occasionally have random code or trauma drills 00:25:40 Rachel Wedin: Our nurses are required to have ACLS, PALS, TNCC. We are in the process of getting ENPC required as well. NRP is provided but not required 00:25:45 Ardith Aspaas: I have to jump off for another meeting. Thank you for the valuable information. Be safe everyone! 00:26:25 JDHENDRICKSON: Hi, we include pediatric competencies in our nursing orientation. One of the most helpful things that we have done was to create a pediatric emergency nurse resource team. This group of nurses have a 1 hour monthly meeting, where we have educations and skills days, competencies and simulations to improve our practice. Then in turn these are the nurses that teach and orient the other nurses. 00:27:19 Michelle Moegling: @JDHENDRICKSON that is a great idea!! 00:27:35 Caitlin: do you just have them sign off on a sheet when they have watched the QR code? 00:29:08 Michelle Moegling: I do not think they sign off, but you can do that. I think it is more for staff to review stuff more than once a year. 00:35:25 Kerri Goodwin: Is anyone the ED Manager and the PdLN? If so, how do you find the time to properly train your staff in regards to pediatric patients? 00:37:32 Kathleen Cunningham: I have been a traveling nurse, each travel agency group has different requirements for previous experience, but hospitals can also demand certain requirements to be met before they hire a contract. The standards we are held to vary.... the agency requires some things, state licensure requires some things (for example, specific states require pediatric abuse reporting coursework), the hospital itself has requirements. 00:37:33 Kelsey Palladino: STN and PTS are both creating packets for that exact reason 00:39:50 Danielle(Summit Healthcare): with the diagram in front of me 00:45:26 Andrea Pace: Thank you so much! 00:45:30 Caitlin: thanks! 00:45:37 Rachel Wedin: Thank you! 00:45:38 Erin Patisteas: thank you so much! 00:45:38 Melissa Mulloy: thank you!! 00:45:41 Danielle(Summit Healthcare): thank you 00:45:52 Charlene C: thankyou so much 00:45:53 Nicole Fisicaro: thank you all so very much! my favorite session thus far!