Tag Archive for: CICU

CICU telemed command center

New telehealth command center redefines hospital care

CICU telemed command center

The new CICU command center redefines hospital care for children with the riskiest heart conditions.

Children’s National Hospital has opened a new telehealth command center that uses cutting-edge technology to keep continuous watch over the most fragile children with critical heart disease. The new command center, located in the Cardiac Intensive Care Unit (CICU), builds off a care model deployed outside the CICU in 2019, but now offers improved collaborative communication to better help predict and prevent major events, like cardiac arrest.

“The new center acts like an air traffic control tower. It allows our telehealth team to remotely monitor each patient room and alert the bedside team to any abnormal trends,” says Ricardo Munoz, M.D., executive director of the Telemedicine Program and chief of the Division of Critical Care Medicine at Children’s National. “Better communication with the bedside team and easier access to all members of the medical and surgical teams means we can provide the best possible care to these fragile infants.”

In the early stages of recovery after heart surgery, vulnerable patients can regress quickly with few outward physical symptoms. The telehealth virtual surveillance system flags early warning signs that a critically ill infant may suffer a serious adverse event.

The system combines traditional remote monitoring, video surveillance and an artificial intelligence algorithm. New features include:

  • Neuromonitoring: Doctors are developing an adaptable neuromonitoring system that can help signal an impending brain injury before it happens.
  • Echocardiography: A cardiologist, embedded in the new command center, is available to expedite and improve communication within the multidisciplinary team.
  • Real-time audio and video: A telemedicine cart is placed in the room of high-risk patients to allow for rapid communication with a bedside nurse.
  • E-CICU team: A team of CICU nurses and physicians implement a second layer of safety over patient care by doing a systematic review of video feeds from patient rooms, patient monitors, artificial intelligence tools trained to detect dangerous trends, labs and imaging studies.

Since the center’s launch, the system’s virtual surveillance has tracked 8,697 virtual surveillance activities, resulting in:

  • 2,350 non-critical communications
  • 199 critical communications that prevented major adverse events

“Parents of our highest-risk patients are comforted knowing our team of doctors and nurses are watching their child at every moment,” says Dr. Munoz. “We are one of the few pediatric hospitals in the world integrating telemedicine into our CICU. Our goal is to expand our monitoring capabilities both nationally and internationally to improve pediatric heart care.”

Children’s National is a recipient of the Telehealth Accreditation from URAC and is the first pediatric hospital to receive this recognition for its ability to leverage technologies to advance high-quality care that promotes clinical best practices, consumer protections and care continuity between patients and providers.

The Board of Visitors Telehealth Command Center was funded by an Auxiliary Board of Children’s National.

telemedicine control room

Telehealth and AI reduce cardiac arrest in the cardiac ICU

telemedicine control room

The telehealth command center located a few steps away from the cardiac ICU at Children’s National Hospital.

The cardiac critical care team at Children’s National Hospital has developed an innovative Tele-Cardiac Critical Care model aiming to keep constant watch over the most fragile children with critical heart disease in the cardiac ICU. The system combines traditional remote monitoring and video surveillance with an artificial intelligence algorithm trained to flag early warning signs that a critically ill infant may suffer a serious event like cardiac arrest while recovering from complex cardiac surgery. This second set of eyes helps bedside teams improve patient safety and quality of care.

These high risk post-operative patients are often neonates or small infants born with the most complex and critical congenital heart diseases that require surgery or interventional cardiac catheterization in their first days or weeks of life. At these early stages after crucial cardiac surgery, these patients can decompensate dangerously fast with few outward physical symptoms.

The AI algorithm (T3) monitors miniscule changes in oxygen delivery and identifies any mismatch with a child’s oxygen needs. It also tracks and displays small changes in vital sign trends that could lead to a serious complication. The cardiac ICU command center staff then analyzes additional patient data and alerts the bedside team whenever needed.

The Tele-Cardiac Critical Care program started two years ago. In that time, the program has contributed to a significant decrease in post-operative cardiac arrest for this patient population.

“It’s easy to see how a model  like this could be adapted to other critical care scenarios, including our other intensive care units and even to adult units,” says Ricardo Munoz, M.D., chief of Cardiac Critical Care and executive director of Telehealth. It allows the physicians and nurses to keep constant watch over these fragile patients without requiring a physician to monitor every heartbeat in person for every patient at every hour of the day to maintain optimal outcomes for all of them.”

Dr. Munoz and Alejandro Lopez-Magallon, M.D., medical director of Telehealth and cardiac critical care specialist, presented data from the pilot program at the American Telemedicine Association’s virtual Annual Meeting on June 26, 2020.