Neuropediatrics 2019; 50(02): 080-088
DOI: 10.1055/s-0038-1676661
Original Article
Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York

Assessing and Improving Documentation of Pediatric Brain Death Determination within an Electronic Health Record

Conrad Krawiec
1   Division of Pediatric Critical Care Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, Penn State Health Children's Hospital, Hershey, Pennsylvania, United States
,
Gary D. Ceneviva
1   Division of Pediatric Critical Care Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, Penn State Health Children's Hospital, Hershey, Pennsylvania, United States
,
Neal J. Thomas
1   Division of Pediatric Critical Care Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, Penn State Health Children's Hospital, Hershey, Pennsylvania, United States
2   Department of Public Health Sciences, Pennsylvania State University College of Medicine, Hershey, Pennsylvania, United States
› Author Affiliations

Funding This research did not receive any specific grant from funding agencies in the public, commercial, or not-for-profit sectors. All authors receive salary support from Penn State Health Children's Hospital.
Further Information

Publication History

02 July 2018

10 November 2018

Publication Date:
20 December 2018 (online)

Preview

Abstract

Background/Objective Pediatric brain death determination (BDD) can be subject to interprovider variability of documentation, resulting in diagnosis credibility. The aim of this study was to describe our approach to assessing pediatric BDD documentation and documentation variation in the electronic health record (EHR).

Methods This was a single institution cross-sectional review of pediatric patients younger than 18 years determined to meet brain death criteria. We assessed electronic documentation and evaluated for the presence of contributing factors that can interfere with the brain death documentation based on our institutional brain death evaluation policy (core body temperature, systolic blood pressure within an acceptable range, sedative/analgesic drug effects, and neuromuscular blockade).

Results In total, 33 pediatric brain death patients were identified. This review revealed pediatric BDD documentation consistency (n, %) as follows: performance of the first pediatric brain death clinical examination with temperature above 36°C (27, 81.8%), systolic blood pressure above the defined range (29, 87.9%), more than 24 hours following admission (28, 84.8%); performance of the second pediatric brain death clinical examination with temperature above 36°C (32, 97%), more than 12 hours following the first examination (26, 89.7%); and ensuring sedative infusions were discontinued within the recommended cutoff period prior to pediatric BDD (28, 84.8%). Clinical neurologic examinations were fully documented.

Conclusions Pediatric BDD is a rare process subject to documentation omissions and error. Our findings highlight the variability of pediatric BDD electronic documentation among different providers and specialties at our institution. An approach to improving pediatric BDD documentation may start with completing a standardized electronic brain death document.

Name of Institution Where the Study Performed

Penn State Health Children's Hospital.


Source of Support

None.


Author Contribution

Dr. Conrad Krawiec was the lead author who conceptualized and designed the study, drafted and completed the initial manuscript, and approved the final manuscript as submitted. Dr. Gary D. Ceneviva assisted with the study design and analysis of the data, reviewed critical portions of the manuscript, contributed to the completed manuscript, and approved the final manuscript as submitted. Dr. Neal Thomas mentored Dr. Krawiec during the course of the project, assisted with the study design, and reviewed and contributed to the completed manuscript. Dr. Thomas approved the final manuscript as submitted.