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Jul. 07, 2025
We have a wealth of experience when it comes to medical products, so you’re in the right place to find out what you should be putting on your emergency medical supplies list to ensure you’re not left short in a critical situation. Your survival is paramount.
You will get efficient and thoughtful service from KAIRUIJIEDE.
We’re a leading healthcare supplier and have worked with UK hospitals, emergency services, British Red Cross, St John Ambulance, search and rescue teams, and the military for over twenty years. Our experience serving these sectors means that we also have the knowledge to advise professionals on what supplies they should be ensuring are on their emergency response equipment list to support their response and help save lives. When it comes to crisis situations, we know it’s essential to cover all bases, and you should too.
Keep reading to find out all about emergency medical supplies and everything you need to keep in your personal survival kit in the event of a crisis, as well as what medical supplies professional emergency response teams and medical staff rely on in the event of a serious emergency such as a terror attack, a fire, flood, or other natural disaster.
When it comes to medical gear, having a comprehensive first aid kit and a well-stocked burncare kit are non-negotiables in terms of your emergency medical supplies list. You should make sure you have medical equipment on hand to be able to treat yourself and others in the event of an injury.
You should also consider keeping other supplies on hand, including blizzard survival gear if there's any chance you'll be situated somewhere cold and remote. Alternatively, if you’re likely to be somewhere hot, humid, and tropical, stocking up on insect repellent, malaria tablets, hydration tablets, and water purification equipment is essential.
Practically speaking, keeping extra power supplies, spare phones, batteries, emergency lighting, hand-held torches, candles, and emergency contact numbers (written down as well as stored on your ) is vital. Having a stash of warm and waterproof clothing, extra layers, spare bedding, blankets, toilet paper, hand sanitiser, and sturdy footwear is also important.
A comprehensive first aid kit that includes a range of medical supplies sufficient to treat a range of minor to major injuries, with enough quantities of items to last for multiple uses.
You may want to build your own first aid kit with a range of supplies specific to your own needs. Make sure to include a selection of premium quality bandages, adhesive dressings and non-adhesive dressings, plasters, wipes, gloves, safety pins, scissors, tweezers, adhesive tapes, and other practical first aid equipment. However, we recommend purchasing our best-selling 70 Piece First Aid Kit, which contains everything required to treat a range of injuries.
We stock several important items that you’ll need to keep with you in an emergency.
While candles, torches and phones are useful, keeping emergency on-demand lighting like the Cyalume® 6" Snaplight Lightsticks, which will remain illuminated for up to 12 hours, is a great solution. They’ll store easily in your emergency supplies kit and light up within seconds. All you need to do is snap them between your hands to light up the area you're in.
Make sure you have a generous amount of any prescription medication you need to take regularly. Packing painkillers like Ibuprofen Tablets and Paracetamol Caplets is always a good idea too, and for anyone prone to allergies, especially in unexpected circumstances, it’s well worth stocking up on anti-allergy medication such as Loratadine Anti-Allergy Syrup or Piriton Allergy Tablets.
In the event of a crisis, whether it’s a house fire, a sudden flood, terror attack, gas explosion, car crash, or other serious emergency that requires a coordinated response, it’s imperative that trained professionals and emergency responders are equipped with everything they need, planned out in advance on a complete emergency response equipment list.
We are proud to have been supplying UK hospitals and emergency services with many of the supplies and pieces of equipment that feature on a comprehensive emergency response equipment list, helping to stablise casulaties in emergency situations and ultimately save lives.
Many paramedics and emergency responders work with specialist gear, including bleed control and trauma supplies, airway management apparatus and advanced life support equipment, which need to be carried and handled with extreme care to ensure they are protected until they reach the casualty safely.
We stock a range of highly visible, extremely durable Teflon WaterStop bags that are built to withstand almost anything. They're used by paramedics across the country and are relied on for their quality and high performance. Professionals can consolidate everything on their emergency response equipment list and put it all in their WaterStop bag so it’s safely in one place, ready to go. Browse our range here.
A crash cart is a rolling set of trays or drawers. The crash cart carries instruments for CPR and other medical supplies. It is used in hospitals to transport and dispense emergency medication and equipment at the site of a medical emergency for life support protocols to potentially save someone’s life. There are hundreds of companies that do it. Hospitals usually have a combination of central supply and pharmacy that put them together.
Razors are generally kept on the crash cart to facilitate the placement of combi pads used in defibrillation.
That is determined by your oversite board within the State where your facility is located.
Put the blade on the handle, open it and make sure the lightbulb works. If not, check the batteries (in the handle) and if that does not fix it, change the bulb.
Actually, an AED by definition is public access. It should be available to all staff including secretarial, aids, nurses and physicians. A Defibrillator is a medical personnel only device. If you have a second AED that covers your waiting room etc, then it would be fine for it to be on the crash cart.
The requirements for who must have a crash cart are dependent upon the State DOH where you practice.
There are no “required” items to stock on any cart. The guidelines are that you must have the equipment to deal with any emergencies that may arise in your setting. With that said D5 1/2 NSS is rarely if even used in resuscitation.
That list does not exist. You are required to have the items in a crash cart that you need to respond to emergencies in your office based on the type of office and the type of patients. A crash cart for a plastics office dealing with young patients would be different than that for a cardiology office servicing the elderly. The only “requirement” is that you have that which is necessary to handle potential emergencies in your practice. Some states have some general guidelines based on practice, but most do not.
Oral and nasal airways of multiple sizes, automated external defibrillator (AED stands for), bag valve mask, pocket masks, gloves.
Regulations for crash carts are defined by the facility. The recommendation is that you can deal with resuscitation situations that occur in your facility. The contents are tailored to your needs.
The standard is written by each facility. Usually, the lock is checked per shift. If it has been broken, the cart is checked. The cart is checked for expirations usually the first day of the month.
There is no “state approval” of crash carts. The policy guiding the use of crash carts is facility dependent. Different facilities have different resuscitation potential.
Although there is no formal “training” or certification required, you must familiarize yourself with the equipment and medications so you can check not only their presence but their function. i.e., does the suction work, is the oxygen tank full?
There are no labels as to what syringe to use. You can use any syringe that the volume to be administered will fit in. For example, if you have 2ml of fluid you could use a 3ml, 5ml, or even a 10ml syringe with it. As far as medication dilution, that would be based upon the policy of each hospital.
Yes. Especially because you have the ability to monitor rhythm on your stress equipment.
You should stock whatever you would need to run a code until EMS arrives plus 5 minutes. So if your EMS says a 10 minute response time you should have the meds to deal with a critical or arrested patient for fifteen minutes.
Calcium gluconate
There is not a “must” answer, but there is a best practice answer. Most facilities place plastic locks on their crash carts. This enables anyone to know that the crash cart has been opened and that there are potentially things missing. So it must be restocked anytime the lock is “cracked”. They are opened and checked monthly because the medications must be checked for expiration dates on a monthly basis. It is just convenient to check the entire cart at the same time and then relocked.
Most facilities utilize a plastic breakaway lock so that if it is broken the cart needs to be checked. If it is intact then everyone knows it has not be utilized.
This policy would differ based upon hospital coding and billing policies.
The general guidelines for plastic is one year.
There are not specific requirements mandated for crash carts.
Every two minutes when the switch of providers occur.
JCAHO dictates that in hospitals if sedation or anesthesia is given someone must have airway training. The hospitals use ACLS certification for that. Whether or not ACLS is required is a function of whatever state licensure you fall under. Although, in my experience with many surgery centers, all RN’s are ACLS certified and PALS if they do children. I hope this helps.
ACLS does not certify anyone to give medication. That is done by your licensure (RN, etc). The guidelines as to what needs to be in your cart are defined by your type of patients.
It would differ depending upon what type of practice. There would be a different list for a surgery center who does pediatric procedures vs a hospital operating room or a physician practice. A pediatric specials PT practice would have different requirements than an adult surgery center who also places ear tubes for pediatrics. An emergency department that sees pediatrics would have different needs than a med/surf floor who has occasional pediatrics for observation.
If you do not treat pediatric patients you have no pediatric equipment or medication requirement in any state.
Narcan should be on the cart anywhere there is narcotic use. Overdoses are very common in nursing care facilities and so they must be equipped to respond.
There is a new Broslow Tape. You are dealing with neonates, totally different issue.
Checking the crash cart (I assume that is what you mean) is simply checking expiration dates and assuring that the contents are complete. This can be done by anyone. It does not require any type of license or certification.
There are no “requirements” for crash carts. They differ depending upon the inspecting body and are generally done by the State DOH. However most simply state that the “facility must be equipped to adequately respond to emergencies that may arise according to the practice of the facility.
Requirements are defined by each individual states. Most do not list individual equipment but rather require that equipment be available to respond to potential emergencies for your practice.
It only needs to be locked to secure narcotics. There are no LEGAL requirements for crash carts. Just that you must be equipped to deal with emergencies that may reasonably be encountered in your practice. I.e, respiratory arrest with sedation, etc. if you utilize a plastic seal the standard practice is to check the cart when the seal is broken and to break that seal at the end of each month to check for each spiration dates on medications. Your practice could differ, but that is pretty standard.
The level of care would increase. I am not aware of any direct billing for “crash cart services”.
There is no legal answer. Intubation is a non issue as it is not even recommended during arrest, but post arrest. There are no laws that govern ACLS. It is a recommended certification but is not necessary to administer any medication. That is based upon your nursing scope of practice and the policies and procedures at your place of employment. An AED will only defibrillate VT or VF so rhythm recognition is not an issue. Epinephrine is indicated in ALL arrested rhythms so recognition is not an issue. The only place you would need to “see” the rhythm would be bradycardia with a pulse and tachycardia with a pulse; but not for cardiac arrest,, at least initially.
The requirements are different in each State. However universally all licensing bureaus require the office/hospital/medical center who performs sedation to be equipped to deal with any and all possible complications arising frim that sedation. Although you could equip your office with appropriate medications, defibrillator and equipment and no store it technically in a “crash cart” this is the most accessible and standard way to do it. Our liability as medical professionals lies with Meeting and be compared to the “standard of care” within our speciality and so it is safer from a liability standpoint to conform to the mean. I hope this helps.
There are no specific requirements for “crash carts”. What most State guidelines require is that you are capable of responding to any emergencies “that can reasonably be expected in your delivery of care within your practice.” So that will differ depending upon the type of care that you render.
There are no requirements for crash carts as the needs depend upon the the facility. Manual IO devices have not been used for ten plus years. The old cooks and jamshudes could be put in manually. The new IO needles are completely different and can only be put in with a drill. They can be put in shoulders, legs and a number of ither sites. The manual ones were way more traumatic then the newer drills which is why no one uses them any longer. There are no requirements for crash carts as the needs depend upon the the facility. Manual IO devices have not been used for ten plus years. The old cooks and jamshudes could be put in manually. The new IO needles are completely different and can only be put in with a drill. They can be put in shoulders, legs and a number of ither sites. The manual ones were way more traumatic then the newer drills which is why no one uses them any longer.
If the defibrillator is plugged into the cart then either unplug the cart or the defibrillator. It is the definition batteries you are checking.
I would have no way of knowing guidelines and regulations for your State. Laws do not govern crash carts. It is State DOH recommendations and JCAHO guidelines that are usually followed.
All requirements for crash carts are defined by whatever your regulatory body is. They are different by State, by governing body (i.e., DOH vs JCAHO). There is no blanket requirement for presence or placement of crash carts.
I would have no way of knowing guidelines and regulations for your State. Laws do not govern crash carts. It is State DOH recommendations and JCAHO guidelines that are usually followed.
It must hold that tank. There are no specific guidelines other than safety.
Yes, defibrillators should remain plugged in when not in use.
That data does not exist to my knowledge, but data to the contrary also doesn’t exist. Many, particularly smaller practices cross train non-medical personnel. Testing a defibrillator requires no medical knowledge. It is simply following a very distinct set of directions and writing down the results, as such requires no medical decision making and places no person at risk.
The same list as the crash cart but with single doses of everything except epinephrine.
You would have to get this answer from the Texas state guidelines.
The standard is for the presence of the lock to be checked each shift and the defibrillator to be fired with a test load (according to manufacturer’s guidelines). If the lock is intact then you document the test and move on. If it is not, the entire cart must be checked (or replaced depending on your policy). The cart must be replaced each time it is used. I hope this is helpful.
Oklahoma Department of Health, JACHO, but that question is quite strange. You are inducing ischemia during a stress test. The indication for stress testing is the suspicion of coronary artery disease. It would be ludicrous to perform stress tests without being able to resuscitate the patient. So although I am sure it is in Oklahoma regulations, it is first and foremost to please use common sense.
Crash carts are not unique by physician or practice type. They are generic because every cardiac arrest is treated via the same algorithms so the medications and the equipment is identical. The only differences are adult vs pediatric carts.
I don’t know what your specific state regulations are, but I know in PA few if any physic clinics have full crash carts.
EMS average response time is longer than ten minutes. You should have the medication necessary to deal with an arrest in the first 10. Minutes. I think you will find that your state regulations require this. What good does it do to have epinephrine 1: if it is not usable because it is not indicated? You need epinephrine 1: to treat cardiac arrest. If you need a crash cart, you need one with the correct medications and equipment.
The purpose of the list of expiration dates is just to make it easier to replace them each month. There is no “requirement” for keeping those checklists.
my State?There are no requirements for crash carts as the needs depend upon the the facility. Manual IO devices have not been used for ten plus years. The old cooks and jamshudes could be put in manually. The new IO needles are completely different and can only be put in with a drill. They can be put in shoulders, legs and a number of ither sites. The manual ones were way more traumatic then the newer drills which is why no one uses them any longer.
Medications are acceptable up until the day of expiration (normally the last day of the month in which they expire) The habit of removing them 90 days ahead came from when facilities would move medications before they expired to units that were more likely to utilize them before expiration. … (see more below)
The current ventricular fibrillation algorithm does not include vasopressin. It was removed with the guidelines. it was thought in that it may produce less ischemia than epinephrine, however, although not Beta it increases the after-load that the heart must pump against and the end result is an increase in ischemia and workload just like epinephrine. So rather than use two agents in the protocol, vasopressin was removed in favor of epinephrine 1mg every 3–5 minutes.
AHA does not write recommendations for specialized patients. However, for bradycardia, it must be a beta agent as a parasympathetic blocker such as Atropine is not effective in the denervated heart. Hope this helps at least a little.
It can be located anywhere that is convenient to care. There is no minimum or maximum number of carts. I believe the guidelines states “ in sufficient number to meet potential patient care needs”. One cart for two rooms is more that sufficient for that purpose. I hope this helps.
There is no common acronym for atrial flutter as it is pretty uncommon. I can’t be sure in this context as I didn’t write the quote she is using. What course is that from?
The need for a crash cart is defined by your state governing authority (usually department of health) or your certifying authority such as JACHO for hospitals. This differs from state to state. It is dependent upon your patient population (risk status) and the procedures (potential for deterioration) that your company does.
Most hospitals that I am familiar with keep them for a year, but that is a matter of individual hospital policy not regulation.
It would depend upon how the unit is classified with the state. My guess is that it is classified as a rehabilitation facility in which case the answer is no. If that is not the case then it would be governed by the North Carolina DOH.
You can add them to your list for your facility. Hospitals almost always utilize the wall oxygen source as a tank running at 15 Liters via Ambu bag will only last several minutes. You can add the oxygen to your checklist to your facility. The checklist is just a suggestion, and not in any means appropriate to every facility and every situation.
We just received new crash carts that have a portable suction attached to the top of the machine. An unsterile suction tubing is attached and left on the suction. Our OR director is concerned about this and thinks the suction tubing should be removed and a sterile suction tubing pack should be placed next to the suction instead. She is concerned the exposed tubing will be cited during inspections. Is this a concern? The disposable suction liner comes with the tubing already connected. What is the standard for this?
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I don’t know what to say except look at the packaging. Unless specifically packed for OR use, it is not packaged sterile.
It depends upon what type of office. If you are doing stress tests, then yes, but not for clinical practice. Most guys keep an AED and have a policy to call EMS.
It can’t be locked (no controlled substances”). It needs to be sealed. Most have a plastic breakable seal so that it can be checked daily to see if items need replaced. Multiple people need emergency access to the cart and it needs to be immediate.
The tag documentation assures that nothing in the cart has been removed or changed. So you know of the number is the same as the last one recorded that is all you have to check. If the tag is missing or not the same then someone was in the cart and you have to check all of the contents to be certain nothing was used.
Correction of blood glucose during cardiac arrest is not recommended in fact is considered harmful so unless you have a speciality application for it there is no need for a glucometer on a crash cart.
That is dictated by whoever their licensing agent is.
The 10 minute cart is simply ten minutes worth of everything in the regular crash cart. It is the same thing.
The neonatal checklist is only appropriate in a neonatal unit which has different needs than a pediatric unit. However, there are different needs in a pediatric unit than in the adult crash cart. There should be a pediatric crash cart standard for the hospital. (Usually utilizes Browslow labelling).
Yes, if you do injections with the possibility of vagal reactions and/or allergic reactions you should have at least a ten minute cart. (Those medications and equipment that you need to administer to an acutely I’ll patient for the first ten minutes).
Absolutely. The idea of an emergency cart is instant access for an emergency. You shouldn’t have to construct it before you can use it.
A crash cart is usually checked daily for intact seal and once a month for expiration dates. Intact seal means the lock (which has a number on it) has not been disturbed. The lock is opened and changed once a month to check packaging and dates. There is nothing that defines who does this although it obviously must be someone medical (to know what they are looking at) Since narcotics are not stored in a crash cart, this does not have to be a RN.
It is a standard crash cart because of the sedation.
The adult airway set has only three sizes for King. The adult oral and nasal airway have only three each.
There are no laws that govern the placement or existence of crash carts. That is a matter of regulatory JCAHO, DOH, or hospital/clinic policy and protocol. Susan Z. Operations Administator
The term crash cart simply means the availability of emergency drugs. It doesn’t have to be a specific type of cart.
No, it is recommended but not required as long as patient treatment is done by someone licensed to do it. ACLS is not a certification, it is a continuing education course.
Yes, capnography is an integral part of adult resiscitation.
There are no such guidelines. That would depend upon the convenience of the providers.
The requirements for patient safety are written by each individual State’s Dept of Health or regulatory agencies so you must check locally.
a neonatal/pediatric crash cart, and/or
in the cardiac cath lab.
A glidescope is an option to be utilized by anesthesia in difficult airways. It would be up to your anesthesia department whether to stock it in the cart.
If there is suction available in all areas where an arrest may occur you are good to go.
It should be inspected regularly (with monthly cart check for expiration dates). It should be checked to make sure the plastic remains soft and pliable and there are no cracks or obvious signs of age or wear.
I have never heard of any such requirement. JCAHO has a recommendation that locations with AED’s be “obviously marked and conveniently located” but that is because they are available for public access.
No, unless you have a cardiothoracic surgeon in your surgery center it would be a useless piece of equipment. I can think of no time that a pericardial tap would be performed outside the hospital. I would venture to assure you that even the CT surgeons do not have a thorocentesis tray. I hope this helps.
There are bag valve masks on pediatric carts.
PEA should not be treated with defibrillation (AED). The only treatment for PEA is to find the cause (usually hypovolemia or hypoxia) and to fix it. Hope this helps.
The recommendation from ECC is that they be “attached and ready to use in an expeditious manner.” In reality there is a happy medium. Most of the ICU’s and ED’s I am familiar with simply slide the plug out of the package, plug it in, leave the actual pads on top of the monitor, still in the package, to keep them from drying out. If you work for a facility that does not use them often, dry pads can be an issue. This solution solves both issues. All you have t do is rip open the package. This is similar to how AEDs are loaded with pads.
You can use whatever system that your hospital approves as long as it provides for the correctly dosed medications. Broselow is just one option that is available to make it easy.
Most hospitals do not place a cart in these areas. Personnel are required to utilize the cart (nurses etc.) so the cart in such an area would never be utilized. The arrest team or the emergency response team from the ED usually responds with a mobile cart to emergencies (employee/visitor) that occur in these areas. Hope this helped.
Are there any age restrictions in giving the exam. I have done my medical degrees in India and have huge experience, I see more than more 50 patients on average per day, so I have vast knowledge in my medical profession from India perspective, therefore my query what is so different between Indian Medical System and the American medical system which can result in potential failure.
The ACLS and BLS standards are international, so people from all countries take these classes successfully.
They would be found either at your state department of health or your certifying body. Many states have no requirements other than to “be able to respond to emergencies arising in your patients.
They are two completely different environments. A hospital directive, whether it be physician order, DNR, etc is never valid outside of the hospital. The only valid way to communicate the desire to not be resuscitated is to utilize a special out of hospital DNR (each state has a different form) that is especially approved for use outside of the hospital. Any documentation of desire becomes invalid when the patient leaves the hospital. A paramedic cannot honor those requests. He/She can contact their medical command physician (ED physician) to terminate efforts, however. I hope this helps.
It would depend on your hospital’s policy, but they do it in most hospitals all the time as long as there are not narcotics (which there should not be).
The checklist for a crashcart is different from facility to facility because it lists the equipment in your cart. An oxygen cylinder in a crash cart should be maintained always greater than half full.
This means that the drug and equipment expirations have been checked and not expired.
Not all doctors offices are required to have a crash cart. It depends on what type of procedures are done there and the risk profile of those procedures.
The number as well as the placement is reasonable. It is not the crash cart but the defibrillator that has time guided recommendations. The AHA recommends that you be able to reach all your patients with a defibrillator within 3 minutes. More remote departments can utilize AEDs for this purpose. The guidelines will be found (if at all) from your state authority or at the lease your certifying body such as JACHO.
That is not a licensing issue. It is the policy of the facility. Most hospitals only have a single RN in their radiology deptartment and regularly use techs to check their carts. I cannot think of a valid reason why this mundane task would require a registered nurse.
I can find no requirement regarding a crash cart if sedation is not being utilized except to provide “emergency equipment for anything that could ‘reasonable arise from treatment modalities offered’. If they are doing injections I would assume, that would be allergic reaction. Without knowing what procedures, that is as close as I can come. The crash cart requirements seems to be related to the use of sedation and general anesthesia. They do neither.
Crash carts are not sterile. While there may be disposable sterile equipment there is nothing sterile on a crash cart. Cleaning and restocking usually occurs after use. Each cart is sealed with a disposable lock. When the seal is broken it is replaced and restocked. They are usually checked by the charge nurse daily utilizing a check list. Drug expirations dates are checked monthly.
That is determined by each state department of health and therefore varies. Some states have a specific number and others simply say “crash cart to meet the needs of the number of patients and their acuity on each unit” You would have to find out what your state recommends.
There are no specific requirements (unless by your state) for the location of crash carts. The recommendation is that every patient should be within three minutes of a defibrillator and all patients receiving sedation should be covered by a crash cart and personnel trained in airway intervention and recognition.
As long as the date of the last check is documented and the expiration dates noted, no. As soon as the box is opened, however for any reason, it must be rechecked, including expiration dates.
Suction is noy sterile. However, because she is in an OR environment it may be different. Unsterile suction tubing is attached to all of the suction in the emergency departments as well as the CATH lab, but neither are sterile environments. If the suction would cross the sterile field it should be sterile. If used only for arrest it does not have to be.
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There should be some calcium channel blocker. It can be Cardiazem or Verapamil, but there should be one as that is first line after Adenosine for narrow complex tachycardia.
my state?There are no requirements for crash carts other than the ability to respond to cardiac and respiratory emergencies, so most facilities base the contents on AHA and a little common sense.
To our knowledge the “crash cart” is not a billable item any more than the defibrillator is.
The only recommendation is that there be a defibrillator within three minutes so that the patient can be defibrillated within three minutes. That can be converted with an AED. There isn’t anything written in stone about carts though.
Medications are acceptable up until the day of expiration (normally the last day of the month in which they expire). The habit of removing them 90 days ahead came from when facilities would move medications before they expired to units that were more likely to utilize them before expiration. For example, hospitals would move critical care meds from carts on med-surg floors, replace them with new meds and move the medications that were to expire in the next 90 days into their ICU units where they were more likely to be used before their expiration date. If you don’t plan on managing your inventory in that manner, then drugs are good for administration up until the expiration date.
Joint Commission recommends that all staff that administer and/or monitor patients who receive conscious sedation be trained in airway management. They don’t specifically name ACLS but most hospitals use it because it has become a standard. The Joint Commission guidelines can be found on their site. Other training guidelines originate from each States DOH and can be different by state.
Ammonia capsules have been contraindicated for just about everything for about five years. It has no place on a crash cart. Hope this helps
Yes, the JCAHO standard MM.2.30(4 & 6) addresses control of supplies on crash carts:
Emergency medications are sealed or stored in containers (for example, crash carts, tackle boxes, emergency drug kits, closed bags that are clearly labeled, and so forth) in such a way that staff can readily determine that the contents are complete and have not expired.
Emergency medications are stored in sealed or in locked containers; in a locked room; or under constant supervision in accordance with law or regulation.
Also laws, usually at the state/province level, regulate access to several of the drugs on the cart, and other laws regulate securing dangerous things in a hospital (sharp and pointy objects). But more directly, each hospital will have its own policies that control the situation you are describing. In many hospitals, one would get written up for stealing from the cart.
In an operating room, the standard is resuscitation equipment in each OR room. You would only need one cart to cover the recovery and preop area.
One cart for each OR and one for prep/recovery. Source: Joint Commission standards, Link
It is not necessary to have a laryngoscope if you have King Airways. King Airways provide a decent airway and require little or no training compared to endotracheal intubation. It is the airway standard as a bail-out for EMS as well as in situations where you have no one trained for intubation. King Airways are perfect for that application (and cheaper).
Maybe. With the recent guideline updates, if you are within 10 minutes distance from an emergency department with ALS equipment then it is possible for you to remove the advanced airway equipment. However, it would be necessary for you to have some airway equipment such as a King airway.
The replacement of the first OR second dose of epinephrine with vasopressin is optional in the AHA cardiac arrest treatment guidelines. It is not used all that often with the exception of some specialty arrests such as those that involve global ischemia such as ischemic myopathy. There is nothing that says it is recommended in cardiac arrest, just that it is acceptable. Therefore you would be fine to delete it from the crash cart. Unopened Vasostrict vials may be held up to 12 months upon removal from refrigeration to room temperature storage conditions (20°C to 25°C[68°F and 77°F], USP controlled room temperature), anytime within the labeled shelf life. Given the fact that it can now be stored for a longer duration, cost should be less of a factor in your decision to maintain it on the crash cart.
Please see this page
The decision to keep a stocked crash cart is not a bad one. Think like an attorney would think. You mean I had a ___________ in a doctor’s office and they couldn’t do anything about it? The lay public does not differentiate between a dermatologist and a cardiologist, they just see a doctor and expect them to respond as such. However, having the equipment and not being able to use it may be worse. The answer is to keep the crash cart and train the physician. It’s the cheapest and best solution.
The only way to maintain a cart in an isolation environment is to create a hot/warm/cold area much like we do for contaminated patients arriving in the emergency department. The cart stays just outside the door with a person who never enters the room. A person stays at the bedside which is in the patient’s hot zone. A warm zone person hands medications from the cold zone outside of the door to the hot zone person. Anyone who touches the patient is contaminated and cannot touch the cart. Multi-dose vials cannot be used in this situation. Any multi-dose vial that is used is contaminated. However, there should be no multi-dose vial on any emergency cart. All IV medications should be in safe doses for a 100lb patient. I cannot think of one arrest medication that would be considered multi-dose. All equipment such as airways, suction catheters, etc., are one use only so it can be handed off and opened in the room.
No. If there is enough equipment to handle two simultaneous emergencies for 10 minutes (assuming you do more than one patient at a time) there is no reason to have more than one crash cart. You do however have to be able to monitor pulse oximetry or capnography for all of your sedation patients.
Most hospitals put a breakaway plastic lock, not a lock requiring a key. It is just so it becomes obvious when it has been opened so it can be restocked. Carts with Narcotics (any controlled substance) must be double locked. However, there should be no controlled substances on a crash cart. There should not be a lock requiring a key on a crash cart because of time and availability. It is an emergency cart and so needs emergency access.
It is a standard 02 regulator attached to an oxygen tank.
Yes, if you are doing conscious sedation. Yes, this counts.
Yes, it can. The fire risk occurs when there is flowing oxygen between the paddles and there is not good contact. For example, defibrillating a patient who has a BVM with oxygen on and it is set down next to the patient for defibrillation and the oxygen is flowing across the patient’s chest. Not a storage issue at all.
In general, most important is that you have a policy and that you follow that policy… whether for JCI or state audit. Our general recommendation is review monthly, after each use, and after change of stewardship (e.g. cart moved between wards which are managed by different teams). Illinois Department of Public Health has not cited any specific review frequencies in this audit https://illinoisrighttolife.org/wp-content/uploads//11/Michigan-Ave-Inspection-Report-6-23-11.pdf They have used daily audits and DOPH has accepted this without citing compliace to a specific code. In other words, your policy is reasonable and everything should be good to go!
A crash cart is not going to topple over, but may be bulky to push. It is on wheels but has suction, boards, etc hanging off the sides. Not sure you could manage it with a walker.
It’s likely to be covered by local policy but every 24 hours is acceptable. Some places request every shift.
Although there are now “numbers” recommended it is based upon the set up and number of patients. You need the ability to respond to each room in which conscious sedation is utilized and a cart in pre and post op area.
Yes, in pediatrics crash trolley drugs are kept in color-coded compartments according to the child’s size. The compartments are color-coded for pediatrics. according to the Broselow Pediatric Emergency Tape. The different compartments relate to the weight of the child to ensure correct dosing.
That is a policy question for the facility, not an external regulation.
Useful article, mentions that 2–4 vials will be recommended per crash cart, but there’s no official line yet on re-adding it to the stock list. We’ll update the course whenever there are updates to the official guidelines.
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