Conference Program
Transcription
Conference Program
Phoenix, Arizona Phoenix Convention Center March 5-9, 2014 Onsite Program Guide Talk about doing something. Do something worth talking about. Choose a career that gives back: dignityhealth.org/careers At Dignity Health, we’re working to inspire a stronger, healthier world. We are one of the nation’s leading hospital networks and growing stronger every day. Nurse leaders at Dignity Health enjoy challenging, inspiring and gratifying careers in a collaborative and supportive environment. As a member of our team, you’ll have the opportunity to champion change by joining in our mission of healing through humankindness. We invite you to explore our opportunities throughout Arizona, California and Nevada. Dignity Health is proud to be a sponsor of ENAoply. Visit us at booth #425 for a chance to win an Apple® iPad® mini! Dignity Health is a not-for-profit system, with over 40 hospitals and growing. Please visit our website, where you will discover unlimited personal potential backed by a supportive network — allowing you to make a difference that goes far beyond your career. EOE. © 2014 Dignity Health. Connect with us: SEVENTH EdiTioN TNCC, widely recognized as the premier course for hospitals and trauma centers worldwide, empowers nurses with the knowledge, critical thinking skills, and hands-on training to provide expert care for trauma patients. § Rapid identification of life-threatening injury and disease § Comprehensive patient assessment § Enhanced intervention for better patient outcomes Available Now Visit www.ena.org/TNCC to find a course near you. 2 Day Intensive Course § 24 Chapter Comprehensive Manual § Hands-on Skill Stations 5 Online Modules § Special Population Chapters Look for TNCC at the ENA Pavillion! Located in the Exhibit Hall The Emergency Nurses Association is accredited as a provider of continuing nursing education by the American Nurses Credentialing Center’s Commission on Accreditation. 2014 Board of Directors PRESIDENT Deena Brecher, MSN, RN, APN, ACNS-BC, CEN, CPEN DIRECTOR Sally K. Snow, BSN, RN, CPEN, FAEN PRESIDENT-ELECT Matthew F. Powers, MS, BSN, RN, MICP, CEN DIRECTOR Jeffery Solheim, MSN, RN-BC, CEN, CFRN, FAEN SECRETARY/TREASURER Kathleen E. Carlson, MSN, RN, CEN, FAEN DIRECTOR Joan Somes, PhD, MSN, RN-BC, CEN, CPEN, FAEN, NREMT-P DIRECTOR Ellen H. “Ellie” Encapera, RN, CEN DIRECTOR Karen K. Wiley, MSN, RN, CEN DIRECTOR Mitchell Jewett, RN, CEN, CPEN IMMEDIATE PAST PRESIDENT JoAnn Lazarus, MSN, RN, CEN DIRECTOR Michael D. Moon, PhD, MSN, RN, CNS-CC, CEN, FAEN EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR Susan M. Hohenhaus, LPD, RN, CEN, FAEN ENA Leadership Conference 2014 2 Follow the action on #ENALC14 2014 ENA Leadership Conference Planning Committee Chairperson Tiffiny Strever, BSN, RN, CEN Member Benjamin E. Marett, MSN, RN, CEN, CCRN, FAEN Member Alicia R. Dean, MSN, RN, APRN, CNS Member Kevin F. McFarlane, BSN, RN, CEN, CPEN Member Michael Hastings, MS, RN, CEN Board Liaison Deena Brecher, MSN, RN, APN, ACNS-BC, CEN, CPEN Member Mari L. Hoover-McGarry, RN, CEN, CCRN Follow the action on #ENALC14 3 ENA Leadership Conference 2014 Table of Contents Schedule at a Glance________________________ 5 Faculty___________________________________36 General Information_________________________ 6 Faculty Disclosures_________________________38 Course Information__________________________ 8 Notes____________________________________40 ENA’s Career Wellness Initiative_______________ 9 Exhibit Hall Hours and Floor Plan____________44 Poster Sessions_____________________________10 Exhibitor Listing and Product Description______45 Poster Presentation Disclosures_______________12 Exhibitor Listing by Product Categories________57 Maps_____________________________________14 Advamed Code of Ethics and Exhibitors________59 Wellness Booth____________________________16 Pharma Code of Ethics and Exhibitors_________59 Wednesday, March 5_______________________17 Advertising Index___________________________60 Thursday, March 6__________________________18 ENA Foundation Night at the Movies__________19 Friday, March 7____________________________20 Saturday, March 8__________________________26 ENA Closing Celebration____________________33 Sunday, March 9___________________________34 ENA Leadership Conference 2014 4 Follow the action on #ENALC14 Follow the action on 6:30 – 7:30 am Wellness: Meditation 7 am 10 am #ENALC14 5 Noon 2 pm Noon - 1:30 pm Educational Session Sponsored by CEP America 9:15 am – 1:45 pm Exhibit Hall Open 11:30 am– 1 pm Lunch in Exhibit Hall 11:30 am – 1 pm ENA Candidates Election Forum 2:45 – 4 pm Concurrent Sessions Jam Session 2:45 – 3:45 pm 1:15 – 4 pm Deep Dive Session 1:15 – 2:30 pm Hand-off Sessions 1:15 – 2:30 pm Concurrent Sessions 1:15 – 2:15 pm Saturday, March 8 Jam Sessions 7:30 am – 12:45 pm Registration, @ENA Wired and Marketplace Express Open 9 am – 12:45 pm ENA Foundation Open 11:15 am – 12:30 pm Concurrent Sessions Sunday, March 9 9 am – 6 pm ENA Foundation Open 4:45 – 6 pm Concurrent Sessions Jam Session 4:15 – 5:45 pm General Session 3:15 – 6 pm Deep Dive Session 9 am – 6 pm ENA Foundation and Marketplace Express Open 7:30 am – 6 pm Registration, @ENA Wired and Marketplace Express Open 9:45 – 11 am Concurrent Sessions 3:15 – 4:30 pm Concurrent Sessions 1:45 – 4:30 pm Deep Dive Session 1:45 – 3 pm Concurrent Sessions Jam Session 1:45 – 2:45 pm 7:30 am – 6 pm Registration and @ENA Wired Open 10 – 11:15 am Hand-off Session 3 – 5 pm Pre-session: CNE Jeopardy 4:45 – 5:45 pm 4 – 5 pm ENA Town Hall Meeting Friday, March 7 5 pm 6 pm 8 pm 7 – 9:30 pm Closing Celebration 6:30 – 9 pm Night Session: Creative Teaching Strategies in CNE 6 - 7:30 pm Emerging Leaders Reception 9 pm 10 pm 8 – 10:30 pm ENA Foundation Night at the Movies 7 – 9 pm State and Chapter Leaders Networking Reception featuring Ignite® Sessions 7 pm 6 – 8 pm ENA Reception with Exhibitors 4 – 7 pm Registration, ENA Foundation, @ ENA Wired and Marketplace Express Open 9 am – 8 pm ENA Foundation and Marketplace Express Open 9:30 am – 1:30 pm Exhibit Hall Open 10 – 11:15 am Concurrent Sessions 4 pm Thursday, March 6 7 am – 8 pm Registration and @ ENA Wired Open 10:30 – 11:30 am– 1 pm 11:30 am Lunch in Exhibit Hall Jam Session 10 – 11 am Jam Session 3 pm Wednesday, March 5 1 – 4 pm ENA Board of Directors Meeting 1 pm 7:30 am – 5 pm State and Chapter Leaders Conference 10:30 – 11:45 am 9:30 – Concurrent 10:30 am Sessions Refreshments with 10:30 – 11:45 am Exhibitors Hand-off Session 9:15 10:15 am Refreshments with Exhibitors 8 – 9:30 am General Session 8 – 9:15 am Concurrent Sessions 8 – 9 am Jam Session 11 am 8 am – 5 pm Pre-session: TeamSTEPPS™ 8 – Noon Pre-session: Writer’s Workshop 9 am 8 – 9:30 am Opening Session 8 am Schedule at a Glance ENA Leadership Conference 2014 General Information Child care To provide a safe atmosphere at the meeting, children and infants are not allowed in educational sessions, the exhibit hall, or special events. If you are planning to bring a child under the age of 18 with you, please make arrangements for child care in advance. Dining Options Breakfast, lunch and dinner options are abundant in Phoenix. Coffee and tea will be made available in the Exhibit Hall on both Friday, March 7, from 9:30 – 10:30 am, and Saturday, March 8, from 9:15 - 10:15 am. ENA will not be hosting continental breakfast during the conference. Conference Mobile App Our conference mobile app gives you all the conference information on your mobile device. ENA Pavilion Visiting the ENA Pavilion is a must for every attendee. Join us as we showcase several new educational products, and share new wellness ideas, and injury prevention activities, eLearning and Educational Products. Features include: Speaker and session information Exhibit hall listing and map Ability to take notes Receive alerts and updates directly to your device for the latest information Sponsored by ENA Strategic Sponsor Download the app today! eLearning and Educational Products TNCC Come and check out the NEW 7th Edition of TNCC. This widely recognized, premier course for hospital and trauma centers worldwide, empowers nurses with the knowledge, critical thinking skills, and hands-on training to provide expert care for trauma patients. GENE See firsthand the newly launched GENE–Geriatric Emergency Nursing Education comprehensive online course will help to improve patient outcomes for older adults. ¡¡ 17 interactive modules ¡¡ Up to 15.21 CNE ¡¡ Geriatric evidence-based research ¡¡ Best practices for the care of older adults @ENA Wired Computers @ENA Wired is a self-serve computerized system area, Social Media, and WiFi hotspot available to all attendees. It allows you to access your personal or work e-mail, record the educational sessions you attend and print a completed certificate onsite. Pick up some social media tips, or recharge your personal device, or get tips on using the Leadership Conference 2014 mobile app and WiFi access. Social Media Attendees are encouraged to network with other colleagues onsite as well as back home. See what other attendees are saying on the ENA Tweetdeck. You can also follow conference activity on Twitter with the hashtag #ENALC14. Career Wellness Stop by @ENA Wired for special opportunities to enhance your career wellness, speak with staff about opportunities, questions or how to develop a plan to achieve your career goals. Give Us Feedback and You Could Win an American Express Gift Card We need your input to continue to improve your ENA Conference Experience. Attendees will be sent the Leadership Conference Survey shortly after conference. Please watch for this e-mail and take a few moments to give us your feedback. You could win a $100 American Express gift card. ENPC Visit us to find out more about ENPC and its updates, and how you can bring this Pediatric Course to your organization. Wellness Join your fellow members in learning about community wellness and sharing injury prevention activities taking place in their states. ENA Leadership Conference 2014 6 Follow the action on #ENALC14 General Information New MOther’s Room Stop by the ENA Registration Help Desk for directions to the New Mothers room which is available during registration hours Wednesday through Sunday. Name Badges Name badges are required for admission to all educational sessions, the exhibit hall, and social functions. No one will be admitted to these events without an official meeting name badge. There is a $10 fee for replacement badges. MEDICAL ASSISTANCE Hospital (no trauma or pediatrics) St. Lukes Medical Center 1800 E. Van Buren St. Phoenix, AZ 85006 (1.7 miles) (602) 251-8100 Urgent Care Concentra Urgent Care - Airport Phoenix 1818 Sky Harbor Circle #150 Phoenix, AZ 85034 (1.7 miles) (602) 244-9500 Trauma Center (no pediatrics) Banner Good Samaritan Hospital 1111 E. McDowell Road Phoenix, AZ 85006(1.8 miles) (602) 839-2000 Photography, Audio/ Video Recording Policy On occasion, an ENA photographer may take photos of people participating in conference functions or activities. Please be aware that these photos are for ENA use only and may appear in future conference programs, catalogs, brochures, ENA Connection, Journal of Emergency Nursing, www.ena.org or other promotional materials. Your attendance constitutes your permission and consent for this photography. Please note that photography and audio/video recording are not allowed inside session rooms or the exhibit hall by attendees. Ribbons Anyone? Let other attendees know about your ENA achievements by selecting ribbons that highlight your ENA experience. Available at the self-serve ribbon table in the registration area. Relaxation Station Attendees can connect and recharge at the complimentary Relaxation Station, located inside the exhibit hall at booth #311. Professional massage therapists provide an upper body massage on a special chair and relax the tension areas of the neck, back, shoulders and arms. These massages help attendees feel refreshed, alert, and energized. Foot massage stations are also available. Wireless network name: 2014_ENA The password is: ena2014lc Smoke-free Meeting In consideration of your health and that of your fellow participants, this is a SMOKE-FREE MEETING. SMOKING IS NOT ALLOWED in or adjacent to the meeting rooms, registration, offices, or at social events. WiFi Free WiFi is available throughout the convention center. Sponsored by Pediatric Hospital (adult/pediatric trauma and burn) Maricopa Medical Center 2601 E. Roosevelt St. Phoenix, AZ 85008 (3.7 miles) (602) 344-5011 Follow the action on #ENALC14 7 ENA Leadership Conference 2014 Course Information CONTACT HOURS Registered attendees can receive up to 22 contact hours at the Leadership Conference 2014 through attendance at Opening, General, Jam, Deep Dive, Hand-off, Concurrent and Poster Sessions. Additional contact hours can be obtained by attending pre-sessions. The number of contact hours earned is shown next to each course type. Contact hour totals are based on the 60-minute credit hour as outlined in ANCC’s 2013 Application Manual. ACCREDITATION The Emergency Nurses Association is accredited as a provider of continuing nursing education by the American Nurses Credentialing Center’s Commission on Accreditation. ENA’s standards meet most of the required criteria for most State Boards of Nursing. California Statement (per California Regulations 1459:1). ENA is approved by the California Board of Registered Nursing, Provider Number CEP 2322 (California Continuing Education Provider #CEP2322). SUCCESSFUL COMPLETION To successfully complete the educational requirements of the ENA Leadership Conference, you will be required to provide course evaluation information when you record your contact hours at ENA Wired. After each selection is made among the educational offerings, you will be asked a short series of questions regarding the faculty presentation and the success of the course. Upon completion of the evaluation questions, your contact hours for that course selection are then recorded in your electronic file. ENA Leadership Conference 2014 COURSE CONTENT ENA strives to provide educational opportunities that reflect various aspects and opinions to help nurses make informed decisions about pertinent issues affecting emergency nursing. Comments, opinions, and/ or recommendations expressed by the faculty in ENA programs or by authors of printed and/or visual materials distributed as part of ENA programs are not necessarily reviewed by or endorsed by the association. In the event of unforeseen circumstances, there may be changes in faculty and program content. COURSE TICKETS AND CLASSROOM SEATING Tickets are not required for every course. Tickets are distributed only for courses with restricted participation and/or an additional fee, such as pre-sessions. All other courses are available on a first-come, first-served basis, so please arrive early if a certain course interests you. DEEP DIVE SESSIONS Experience in-depth exploration of topics that simply can’t be covered in a traditional course length. Take advantage of these unique opportunities to expand your knowledge to a greater level in these extended, interactive sessions which require no additional fee. Pre-registration and ticket required. POSTER SESSIONS: RESEARCH AND EVIDENCE-BASED PRESENTATIONS Research and evidence-based practice posters are on display during ENA Leadership Conference. Take advantage of this opportunity to review current studies on relevant emergency nursing topics. The researchers will be present to discuss their studies at specified times. HAND–OFF SESSIONS These unique sessions encompass two related topics each in a concise 35-minute format to form one information packed session with must-knows that are important to you. Each session is worth 1.25 contact hours. These sessions are marked for ease of identification. Attendees may not transfer between sessions as these subtopics cannot be individually selected for contact hours. JAM SESSIONS These instructor-led, open forum sessions encourage expanded interactivity between attendees and instructors well beyond the classroom atmosphere of a traditional session. Expert faculty will guide the discussion by providing a base presentation of ideas and soliciting the experience, stories and ideas from you the attendee. Be a part of these unique learning – sharing sessions. 8 Follow the action on #ENALC14 ENA’s Career Wellness Initiative ENA’s Career Wellness Initiative is designed to provide resources and opportunities to help you focus on your career so you can achieve your personal career goals. By focusing on career wellness it will help you establish a plan, so you are prepared, even for the unexpected. As your professional organization, ENA supports your professional development and provides you opportunities to focus on your individual career wellness. Stop by the @ENA Wired desk to discover and discuss the opportunities available to you. ENA Foundation State Fundraising Challenge Building a Strong Foundation February 1 – May 31 How will your state stack up? þ þ þ Largest percentage increase per capita Largest number of individual donations per state Can your state raise more than $5000? How high can we go? 2014 State Fundraising Challenge visit www.enafoundation.org Please stop by our booth located near registration. Follow the action on #ENALC14 9 ENA Leadership Conference 2014 Poster Sessions Research Posters 400-409 400 - Emotional Intelligence and Lateral Violence in Nursing: A Correlation Study Tara Slagle, MSN, RN 401 - Horizontal Hostility Among Emergency Nurses in a Level 1 Trauma Center Heather Liska, MPA, BSN, RN, CEN 402 - Violence in the Emergency Department: All in a Day’s Work Meredith Becker, BSN, RN, CEN Elizabeth Dunn, BSN, RN, CEN Darcy Copeland, PhD, RN Jason Brauninger, BSN, RN, CEN 403 – A Two-way Street: Physician Perceptions of Factors in Effective Nurse-Physician Collaborative Relationships Kylie Lindberg, MEd, BSN Lisa Wolf, PhD, RN, CEN, FAEN 404 - Fostering Nursing Role Transition: Utilizing Elective Emergency Courses Cindy Slone, EdD, RN, CEN 406 - Communication Tool Effect on ED Patients’ Comprehension and Satisfaction of Care Mary Kate Dilts Skaggs, MSN, RN, NE-BC 407 - Staff Perceptions of Communication and Teamwork in the Emergency Department Jacqueline Hall, BSN, RN Jean Anne Connor, DNS, RN, CPNP Sandra Mott, PhD, RN-BC, CPN Frances J. Damian, MS, RN, NEA-BC 408 - Optimizing Transfer of Care from the Emergency Department Jennifer Naughton, BSN, RN Jean Anne Connor, DNS, RN, CPNP Sandra Mott, PhD, RN-BC, CPN Frances J. Damian, MS, RN, NEA-BC 409 – Disaster Preparedness and Emergency Nursing: How Prepared are You? Stefanie E. Zeller, MSN, RN ENA Leadership Conference 2014 Evidence-based Practice Posters 410-439 421 - Force Feeding Education Doesn’t Work - Inclusion Does! Rebecca Barron, MS, RN, CEN 410 - A Synergy Project: Ultrasound Guided-Peripheral Intravenous Access Angela Hodge, MSN, RN, CEN, ACNSBC, EMT-P 422 - Emergency Nursing and Physical Therapy: A Powerful Stride Forward Kathleen M. Henkelman, MSN, RN, CEN Blake W. Stahl, MBA, PT 411 - Sepsis Alert to Recognize and Treat Patients Faster Alexandra Wells, BSN, RN, CEN 413 - Violence in the Workplace: Strategies for Change Darlene Bradley, PhD, RN, CNS, FAEN Sherlene Stepp, RN, MICN 414 - Life Threatening: The Active Shooter in the Emergency Department Sherlene Stepp, RN, MICN Darlene Bradley, PhD, RN, CNS, FAEN 415 - Improving Patient Satisfaction through Pain Control Joy Po, BSN, RN, MICN 416 - Pivoting Triage Out of the Way Suzanne Weckman, BSN, RN, CEN Shari D. Riley, MSN, RN Mindy Raetz, BSN, RN 423 - An Innovative Model for Emergency Department Behavioral Health Care Tiffany Young, MA, BSN, RN 424 - Time is Brain, Team is Key Chantal Howard, MSN, RN, CEN Leighann Flanagan, RN, CEN 425 - As Simple as 1-2-3: Recruit, Respect, Retain Chantal Howard, MSN, RN, CEN Leighann Flanagan, RN, CEN Laura Exterkamp, MHA, MBA, RN, CEN 426 - A Security Program to Increase Safety in the Emergency Department Darci A. Evans, BSN, RN 417 - Implementation of Bar Code Medication Administration in an Emergency Department Setting Jacqueline Brown, MSN, RN 427 - Mistaken Identity: Mislabeled Specimens in the Emergency Department Stacie Howard-Carpenter, MHA, MSN, RN, CEN Stephanie Mallette, MSN, RN, CEN Jane Sewell, BSN, RN, CEN 418 - Implementing Best Practices to Reduce Unnecessary Emergency Department Visits Reid Buker, MN, RN 428 - “Little White Pill”: Improving Accuracy of Emergency Department Medication History Jane Sewell, BSN, RN, CEN 419 - Provider at Triage Malloree Barnes, BSN, RN 429 - Sepsis Alert: An Emergency Team Approach to Surviving Sepsis Mary Bigowsky, MSN, RN, NEA-BC *Jan Divelbiss, MSN, RN, CEN 420 - Saving Hearts: Reducing Emergency Department Door-toElectrocardiogram Times Monica Huber, MSAS, RN Robin Huether, BSN, RN Patty McMurphy, RN, CEN Paula Vogelsang, BSN, RN, CEN Tori Batterman, BSN, RN Kristen Cline, RN, CEN, CPEN Rebekah Schelhaas, RN, CEN 10 430 - Reducing Sepsis Mortality in a Large Health Care System Kristine Powell, MSN, RN, CEN, NEABC 431 - Brain Attack Team to the Brain Attack Room Timothy D. Marks, MSN, RN, CEN Mary Bilotta, BSN, RN, CEN Follow the action on #ENALC14 Poster Sessions 432 - Implementation of a Modified Emergency Department Overcrowding Measure David Barishman, MHA, BSN, RN 433 - Improving Patient Flow Julie Fulcher, MSN, CNS-BC, CEN Therese Brdaric, BSN, RN Rhonda Tronsue, AD, RN 436 - Setting Best Practice: Realizing Synergy, Culture Change and Community Outreach Rachel Start, MSN, RN Tonya Reddy, RN, APN Lisa Wilson, BSN, RN, NE-BC Karen Mayer, MSN, RN, NEA-BC, FACHE 439 - Promoting Clear, Concise Communication with Patients and Families Frances J. Damian, MS, RN, NEA-BC Alexis Schmid, MS, RN, CPEN, CCRN, CPNP-PC/AC Jacqueline Hall, BSN, RN Nancy E. Kline, PhD, RN, CPNP, FAAN 437 - Utilizing Lean Six Sigma to Reduce Length of Stay Vijay Akkapeddi, MD Cynthia Wright, MA, RN Patricia Tayag, MA, RN Georgina Angeles, MPA 434 - There’s a SIM in my Bed Julie Fulcher, MSN, CNS-BC, CEN Jack Lasky, EMT-P, CRTT Shawn Clark, DO, PhD Brent Parry, BS, NREMT-P 435 - GEDI WISE: Bridging the Gap from the ED to Home Barbara A. Buckley, BSN, RN Erin O’Connell Burke, BSN, RN Dwayne Dobschuetz, MSN, RN Alicia Salgado, BSN, RN GEDI WISE Author Group 438 - Optimizing Emergency Department Throughput with Improved Triage Processes Tammy Bimber, MSN, RN, CEN Names in purple represent the onsite presenters at 2014 Leadership Conference ( * ) indicates presenter only, non-author Presents: What it means to be a leader Career Center § Integrity § Communication § Creativity § Passion § Confidence § Sense of Humor Please join us for a panel discussion on the traits and qualities of successful nurse leaders. Followed by small group networking with the panelists. Welcome to Phoenix! Who: Emerging Leaders When: Friday, March 7, 2014, 6 – 7:30 pm Where: Renaissance Phoenix Downtown Goldwater Room 50 East Adams Street enacareercenter.ena.org Follow the action on #ENALC14 11 ENA Leadership Conference 2014 Poster Presentation Disclosures The following poster presenters have returned disclosure forms indicating that they have a financial interest in an organization(s) that may have direct interest in the subject matter of his/ her presentation(s): Mary Kate Dilts Skaggs, MSN, RN, NE-BC, Director of Nursing, Emergency & Outpatient Services, Southern Ohio Medical Center, Portsmouth, OH #406 Commercial Interest: Blue Cross of Michigan Category: Other – Grant funding Role: Author Lisa Wolf, PhD, RN, CEN, FAEN, Director, Institute for Emergency Nursing Research, Emergency Nurses Association, Des Plaines, IL #403 Commercial Interest: Employed by Emergency Nurses Association Category: Salary Role: Author The following poster presenters have returned disclosure forms indicating that they have no financial interest in any organization(s) that may have direct interest in the subject matter of his/ her presentation(s): Vijay Akkapeddi, MD, Chairman of Emergency Department, Kingsbrook Jewish Medical Center, Brooklyn, NY #437 Georgina Angeles, MPA, Performance Improvement Consultant-1199 SEIU Labor Management Project, Kingsbrook Jewish Medical Center, Brooklyn, NY #437 David Barishman, MHA, BSN, RN, Nurse Manager, University of Illinois Hospital & Health Sciences System, Chicago, IL #432 Malloree Barnes, BSN, RN, Clinical Nurse Educator, Providence St. Peter Hospital, Olympia, WA #419 Rebecca Barron, MS, RN, CEN, Clinical Educator, Alexian Brothers Medical Center, Elk Grove Village, IL #421 Tori Batterman, BSN, RN, Performance Improvement Coordinator for the Emergency Department, Sanford Health, Sioux Falls, SD #420 Meredith Becker, BSN, RN, CEN, Emergency Department Registered Nurse, St. Anthony Hospital, Lakewood, CO #402 Mary Bigowsky, MSN, RN, NEA-BC, Director, HMHP St. Elizabeth Health Center, Youngstown, OH #429 ENA Leadership Conference 2014 Mary Bilotta, BSN, RN, Advance Practice Care CoordinatorEmergency Department, Reading Health System, Reading, PA #431 Tammy Bimber, MSN, RN, CEN, ED Unit Director, UPMC Northwest, Seneca, PA #438 Darlene Bradley, PhD, RN, CNS, FAEN, Director Emergency/Trauma Services, University of California Irvine Medical Center, Orange, CA #413, #414 Jason Brauninger, BSN, RN, CEN, Full time Master’s Degree Student, Denver, CO #402 Therese Brdaric, BSN, RN, Administrative Team Coordinator, Geisinger Wyoming Valley Medical Center, Wilkes-Barre, PA #433 Jacqueline Brown, MS, RN, Director of Emergency Services, Providence St. Peter Hospital, Olympia, WA #417 Barbara A. Buckley, BSN, RN, Lead Geriatric Nurse Liaison, Northwestern Memorial Hospital, Chicago, IL #435 Reid Buker, MN, RN, Patient Liaison ED Coordinator, Providence St. Peter Hospital, Olympia, WA #418 Shawn Clark, DO, PhD, Emergency Medicine Physician, Geisinger Wyoming Valley Medical Center, Wilkes-Barre, PA #434 Kristen Cline, RN, CEN, CPEN, Department Education Coordinator, Clinical Care Coordinator, Sanford USD Medical Center, Sioux Falls, SD #420 Jean Connor, DNS, RN, CPNP, Director of Nursing Research, Cardiovascular & Critical Care Services, Boston Children’s Hospital, Boston, MA #407, #408 Darcy Copeland, PhD, RN, Nurse Scientist, St. Anthony Hospital, Lakewood, CO #402 Frances Damian, MS, RN, NEA-BC, Director of Nursing/Patient Services, Boston Children’s Hospital, Boston, MA #407, #408, #439 Mary Kate DiltsSkaggs, MSN, RN, NEBC, Director of Nursing, Emergency & Outpatient Services, Southern Ohio Medical Center, Portsmouth, OH #406 12 Janet Divelbiss, MSN, RN, Director of Emergency Services, HMHP St. Elizabeth Health Center, Youngstown, OH #429 Dwayne Dobschuetz, MSN, RN, Geriatric Nurse Liaison, Northwestern Memorial Hospital, Chicago, IL #435 Elizabeth Dunn, BSN, RN, CEN, Emergency Department Director, St. Anthony Hospital, Lakewood, CO #402 Darci A. Evans, BSN, RN, Nursing Care Team Leader, University of Wisconsin Hospital and Clinics, Madison, WI #426 Laura Exterkamp, RN, CEN, Clinical Educator/Supervisor Adult Emergency Department, WakeMed Health & Hospitals, Raleigh, NC #425 Leighann Flanagan, RN, CEN, Clinical Educator/Supervisor Adult Emergency Department, WakeMed Health & Hospitals, Raleigh, NC #424, #425 Julie Fulcher, MSN, CNS-BC, CEN, Clinical Nurse Educator, Geisinger Wyoming Valley Medical Center, Wilkes-Barre, PA #433, #434 Jacqueline Hall, BSN, RN, Staff Nurse, Emergency Department, Boston Children’s Hospital, Boston, MA #407, #439 Kathleen M. Henkelman, MSN, RN, CEN, Clinical Nurse Consultant Emergency Department, Alexian Brothers Medical Center, Elk Grove Village, IL #422 Angela Hodge, MSN, RN, CEN, ACNSBC, EMT-P, Emergency Services Clinical Coordinator, Southern Ohio Medical Center, Portsmouth, OH #410 Chantal Howard, MSN, RN, CEN, Nurse Manager Adult Emergency Department, WakeMed Health & Hospitals, Raleigh, NC #424, #425 Stacie Howard-Carpenter, MHA, MSN, RN, CEN, Director of Emergency Department, Aultman Hospital, Canton, OH #427 Monica Huber, MSAS, RN, Vice President, Sanford Health, Sioux Falls, SD #420 Robin Huether, BSN, RN, Director of Emergency Department & Trauma Services, Sanford Health, Sioux Falls, SD #420 Follow the action on #ENALC14 Poster Presentation Disclosures Nancy E. Kline, PhD, RN, CPNP, FAAN, Director, Nursing Research, Medicine Patient Services and Emergency Department, Boston Children’s Hospital, Boston, MA #439 Jack Lasky, EMT-P, CRTT, EMS Coordinator-Geisinger Northeast, Geisinger Wyoming Valley Medical Center, Wilkes-Barre, PA #434 Kylie Lindberg, MEd, BSN, Nursing Student, University of Massachusetts Amherst College of Nursing, Amherst, MA #403 Heather Liska, MPA, BSN, RN, CEN, Unit Based Educator-Emergency Department, St. Anthony Hospital, Lakewood, CO #401 Stephanie Mallette, MSN, RN, CEN, Emergency Department Nurse Educator, Aultman Hospital, Canton, OH #427 Timothy D. Marks, MSN, RN, CEN, Division Director-Emergency Division, Reading Health System, West Reading, PA #431 Karen Mayer, MSN, RN, NEA-BC, FACHE, Chief Nursing Officer, Rush Oak Park Hospital, Oak Park, IL #436 Patty McMurphy, RN, CEN, Clinical Manager of Emergency Department, Clinical Care Coordinator Emergency Department, Sanford Health, Sioux Falls, SD #420 Sandra Mott, PhD, RN-BC, CPN, Nurse Scientist/Consultant, Cardiovascular & Critical Care Services, Boston Children’s Hospital, Boston, MA #407, #408 Jennifer Naughton, BSN, RN, Registered Nurse, Boston Children’s Hospital, Boston, MA #408 Erin O’Connell Burke, BSN, RN, Geriatric Nurse Liaison, Northwestern Memorial Hospital, Chicago, IL #435 Brent Parry, BS, NREMT-P, Trauma Prevention and Outreach Coordinator, Geisinger Wyoming Valley Medical Center, Wilkes-Barre, PA #434 Joy Po, BSN, RN, MICN, Clinical Nurse II, Patient Care Coordinator, University of California Irvine Medical Center, Orange, CA #415 Follow the action on Kristine Powell, MSN, RN, CEN, NEA-BC, Director of Emergency Services, Baylor Health Care System, Dallas, TX #430 Mindy Raetz, BSN, RN, Emergency Department Educator, Phelps County Regional Medical Center, Rolla, MO #416 Tonya Reddy, RN, APN APN Emergency Department, Rush Oak Park Hospital, Oak Park, IL #436 Shari D. Riley, MSN, RN, Director of Emergency Services, Phelps County Regional Medical Center, Rolla, MO #416 Alicia Salgado, BSN, RN, Geriatric Nurse Liaison, Northwestern Memorial Hospital, Chicago, IL #435 Rebekah Schelhaas, RN, CEN, Staff Registered Nurse, Sanford USD Medical Center, Sioux Falls, SD #420 Alexis Schmid, MS, RN, CPEN, CCRN, CPNP-PC/AC, Staff Nurse II, Boston Children’s Hospital; Per Diem Staff Nurse, Pediatric Emergency Department, Boston Medical Center, Boston, MA #439 Jane Sewell, BSN, RN, CEN, Emergency Department Assistant Nurse Manager, Aultman Hospital, Canton, OH #427, #428 Tara Slagle, MSN, RN, ED Staff Nurse and Charge Nurse, Hanover Hospital, Hanover, PA #400 Cindy Slone, EdD, RN, CEN, Assistant Nursing Professor Creighton University, Omaha, NE #404 Blake W. Stahl, MBA, PT, Clinical Manager, Outpatient Rehabilitation Services, Alexian Brothers Medical Center, Elk Grove Village, IL #422 Rachel Start, MSN, RN, Magnet Program Director, Rush Oak Park Hospital, Oak Park, IL #436 Sherlene Stepp, RN, MICN, Director Emergency Services, University of California Irvine Medical Center, Orange, CA #413, #414 Patricia Tayag, MA, RN, Director of Lean/Quality Resources, Kingsbrook Jewish Medical Center, Brooklyn, NY #437 #ENALC14 13 Rhonda Tronsue, AD, RN, Emergency Department Operations Manager, Geisinger Wyoming Valley Medical Center, Wilkes-Barre, PA #433 Paula Vogelsang, BSN, RN, CEN, Clinical Manager Emergency Department, Sanford USD Medical Center, Sioux Falls, SD #420 Suzanne Weckman, BSN, RN, CEN, Trauma Coordinator/Shift Manager, Phelps County Regional Medical Center, Rolla, MO #416 Alexandra Wells, BSN, RN, CEN, ED Clinical Coordinator, Union Hospital of Cecil County, Elkton, MD #411 Lisa Wilson, BSN, RN, NE-BC, Unit Director, Emergency Department, Rush Oak Park Hospital, Oak Park, IL #436 Cynthia Wright, MA, RN, Associate Director of Nursing-ED, Kingsbrook Jewish Medical Center, Brooklyn, NY #437 Tiffany Young, MA, BSN, RN, Staff Nurse IV, WakeMed Health & Hospitals, Raleigh, NC #423 Stefanie E. Zeller, MSN, RN, Nursing Practice & Research Staff Development Instructor, Pinnacle Health Systems, Harrisburg, PA #409 GEDI WISE Author Group, Northwestern Memorial Hospital, Chicago, IL #435 ENA Leadership Conference 2014 Maps North Building - 100 / Street Level ENA Foundation Night at the Movies State and Chapter Leaders Conference Opening Session General Sessions ENA Candidates Election Forum IENR Research Lounge Speaker Concierge Board of Directors Meeting & Town Hall Meeting ENA Leadership Conference 2014 14 Follow the action on #ENALC14 Maps North Building - 300 Level Career Wellness ENA Foundation FUN-raising @ENA Wired Marketplace Express Registration Poster Sessions ENA Pavilion Exhibit Hall Lunch in the Exhibit Hall Refreshments with Exhibitors ENA Reception with Exhibitors Follow the action on #ENALC14 15 ENA Leadership Conference 2014 Wellness Booth ENA Pavilion The World Health Organization broadly defines Wellness as reaching beyond physical activity and nutrition. ENA has adopted WHO’s definition, considering total Wellness to have eight components that affect various aspects of our lives. The Wellness Booth theme for Leadership Conference 2014 is Community Involvement. Stop by the Wellness Booth to learn how you can increase your Wellness, while helping your community, through Community Involvement! Looking forward to seeing you there! Marketplace LOCATEd IN: North Hall C express HOurs: ENA’s store for all your educational and product needs. Wednesday 4 – 7 pm • Leadershipbooks,referencebooksand studyguides Thursday 9 am – 8 pm • ENAmerchandise–conferenceshirts,pins andmore Friday 9 am – 6 pm • Onsitediscountsandfreeshipping NEW! ENAZipperedPadfolio Shop online 24/7 at www.ena.org/shop ENA Leadership Conference 2014 16 Saturday 7:30 am – 6 pm Sunday 7:30 am – 12:45 pm Follow the action on #ENALC14 Wednesday, March 5 1 – 4 pm ENA Board of Directors Meeting North 131 A-C 4 – 7 pm Registration, ENA Foundation FUN-raising, @ENA Wired, Express Registration and Marketplace Express Open CC North Exhibit Hall C (All ENA Members welcome) 4 – 5 pm ENA Town Hall Meeting North 131 A-C (All ENA Members welcome) Join 2014 ENA President Deena Brecher, MSN, RN, APN, ACNS-BC, CEN, CPEN, and the ENA Board of Directors at this town hall meeting to share ideas and comments with ENA leadership and colleagues. 3 – 6 pm Speaker Concierge North 125 B 7 – 9 pm State and Chapter Leaders Networking Reception featuring Ignite® Sessions Renaissance Phoenix Downtown Grand Ballroom 50 East Adams Street (State and Chapter Leaders Conference Attendees) Begin connecting with your fellow colleagues featuring Ignite® sessions. Watch your colleagues present in these fast-paced 5-minute sessions packed with creativity, humor and insight. Don’t miss this exciting reception filled with networking opportunities and entertainment from your very own! You Can Make A Difference! Come to Washington D.C. On May 6-7, 2014, please join emergency nursing leaders from across the country for ENA’s Day on the Hill event at the Crystal Gateway Marriott in Crystal City, VA, located just minutes from Washington D.C. and Capitol Hill. Meet with your members of the U.S. Congress and their Capitol Hill Staff. Learn more about advocacy and how you can make a difference in current emergency nursing legislative issues. Contact your ENA State President or Government Affairs Chair for details and reservations or email [email protected] with any questions. Follow the action on #ENALC14 17 ENA Leadership Conference 2014 Thursday, March 6 7 am – 6 pm 8 am – 5 pm 7.07 Contact Hours Speaker Concierge North 125 B 7 am – 8 pm Registration and @ENA Wired Open North Hall C 7:30 am – 5 pm State and Chapter Leaders Conference North Ballroom 120 CD (by invitation only) All 2014 State Council and Chapter Leaders are invited to participate in the State and Chapter Leaders Conference. As your national association, ENA wants to provide you with the information and leadership skills you need to manage your state or chapter and take it to new heights. State and Chapter Government Affairs Chairpersons are encouraged to attend the Government Affairs/Advocacy sessions that have been built into the program. Join your fellow leaders in Phoenix. Outstanding learning and networking opportunities await you! State Council Achievement Awards will be presented at the ENA Leadership Conference 2014. 9 am – 8 pm Deena Brecher, MSn, rn, apn, acns-bC, cen, cpen Michael Hastings, MS, RN, CEN Catherine Olson, MSN, RN Kathy Szumanski, MSN, RN, NE-BC Limited capacity; preregistration and ticket required 3 pm – 5 pm 1.5 Contact Hours Career Wellness, ENA Foundation FUN-raising and Marketplace Express Open North Hall C PRE-SESSION CNE Jeopardy North 127 ABC Presentation of current continuing nursing education criteria through an engaging and interactive hybrid teaching strategy based on the popular game of Jeopardy. ¡¡ Assess the key components of the educational design concept 8 – Noon 3.5 Contact Hours PRE-SESSION Writer’s Workshop North 131 AB Do you want to share your knowledge and expertise with the international emergency nursing community but lack confidence in your writing skills? Are you an experienced writer interested in taking your skills to the next level? If so, please join us at the Writing Workshop: ¡¡ Learn how ENA authors are recruited and editors selected ¡¡ Appraise the important role of the nurse planner in developing fine quality continuing nursing education products ¡¡ Describe the importance of ensuring content integrity in continuing nursing education products Janet Crawford, MSN, ACNS, BC ¡¡ See the process of turning a manuscript into published material 6 – 8 pm ¡¡ Hone your skills with 1:1 assistance from an ENA published author or editor ENA Reception with Exhibitors North Hall DE Mix and mingle with exhibitors and explore innovative technologies and services for the emergency nursing industry in a relaxed professional setting. Enjoy one complimentary beverage and light hors d’oeuvres. A cash bar will be available. Prerequisites: ¡¡ Participation in three 30 minute Writing Workshop Webinars and submission of a writing sample prior to LC14 – Details provided in Writing Workshop Webinar Paula M. Karnick PhD, ANP-BC, CPNP Limited capacity; preregistration and ticket required ENA Leadership Conference 2014 PRE-SESSION TeamSTEPPS™ North 132 AB An eight hour face-to-face, instructor-led teamwork system aimed at improving patient safety by creating a shared mental model through evidence-based, transferable skills related to the foundational elements of Leadership, Communication, Situation Monitoring, and Mutual Support. TeamSTEPPS™, based on over 25 years of research and evidence on team performance, was developed by the Department of Defense and the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) and has been customized by the Emergency Nurses Association to meet the unique needs of the emergency care team and its patients. Led by internationally recognized TeamSTEPPS™ faculty, this highly interactive program provides the fundamental elements of the program as well as a platform for discussion of best practices related to the implementation of TeamSTEPPS™ curriculum. 18 Follow the action on #ENALC14 ENA Foundation Night at the Movies Thursday, March 6 8 – 10:30 pm North Ballroom 120 D Join your fellow conference attendees and the ENA Foundation for a private screening of the documentary film – The Waiting Room. Movie watchers will have the exclusive opportunity to view the movie and a special Q & A with the film’s director, Peter Nicks. Enjoy a light meal and snacks. Cash bar available. Fee: $45.00 A portion of your ticket price is a donation to the ENA Foundation. Peter Nicks “If I could choose one film to play in the White House screening room this year, it would be ‘The Waiting Room.’” –Ann Hornaday, The Washington Post Follow the action on #ENALC14 19 ENA Leadership Conference 2014 Friday, March 7 6 – 8 am 8 – 9:30 am 1.5 Contact Hours 1.0 Contact Hour OPENING SESSION Early Bird Poster Session North Hall CDE Lobby 6:30 – 7:30 am Wellness Meditation Session North 221 A-C Start your day by attending ENA’s first ever offered meditation class, led by a certified yoga instructor. Learn skills to alleviate stress in less than one minute, as well as learning lengthier meditation techniques. No special clothing is required: come dressed ready to head straight to the Opening Session. 7 am – 9 pm Speaker Concierge North 125 B 7: 30 am – 6 pm Registration and @ENA Wired Open North Hall C 7: 30 am – 6 pm Illusions and Strategies for Ensuring Safe Patient Care 0.5 Contact Hour North Ballroom 120 CD Poster Sessions North Hall CDE Lobby Safety ¡¡ Describe and interpret the everyday illusions that lead to adverse events in healthcare ¡¡ Identify self-assessment and feedback strategies that can dispel the illusions and decrease adverse patient events Gloria F. Donnelly, PhD, RN, FAAN, FCCP 9 am – 6 pm ENA Foundation FUN-raising and Marketplace Express Open North Hall C 9:30 am – 1:30 pm Exhibit Hall Open North Hall DE 9:30 – 10:30 am Refreshments with Exhibitors North Hall DE ENA Leadership Conference 2014 20 Follow the action on #ENALC14 Friday, March 7 10:30 – 11:30 am 1.0 Contact Hour Beyond Boundaries North 127 AB Flow JAM SESSION Influencing Culture: Lead Your ED to a Culture of Safety, Excellence and Caring North 126 AB Management ¡¡ Discover proven methods for creating a culture of safety, excellence and caring ¡¡ Explore and discuss new ideas, best practices, communication technique, novel practice or leadership style to improve safety, excellence and caring in your ED This course is repeated Saturday 1:15 – 2:15 pm. Joshua D. McCabe, MSN, RN, CEN 10:30 – 11:45 am 1.25 Contact Hours HAND-OFF SESSION The Puzzle of Communicating with Patients with Autism Spectrum Disorders North 132 A-C ¡¡ How regionalization can improve patient outcomes ¡¡ How a voluntary pediatric regionalization process for emergency departments evolved into better patient outcomes ¡¡ Why increased pediatric education for nurses and physicians is crucial Tomi St. Mars, MSN, RN, CEN, FAEN CONCURRENT SESSIONS Creating Autonomy and Structure with Accountability in the Emergency Department North 124 AB Management ¡¡ Describe methods to create structure and autonomy as a leader while maintaining staff accountability ¡¡ Learn how appropriate resource allocation and project planning can lead to hardwiring concepts for process improvement ¡¡ Discover ways to enhance, optimize, and refresh your leadership style Ursula Lawrence, MSN, RN Professional Development ¡¡ Understanding the spectrum of autism ¡¡ Social and communication challenges for patients who have autism spectrum disorders ¡¡ Strategies for successful interactions when patients present with autism spectrum disorders Elizabeth A. Mizerek, MSN, RN, CEN, CPEN, FN-CSA Effective Communication with a Deaf Patient in the ED Complacency Causes Catastrophe but Consistency Creates Culture North 129 AB Professional Development ¡¡ Recognize the characteristics of a complacent culture ¡¡ Recognize the pitfalls of a complacent culture ¡¡ Recall strategy for changing a culture Angie K. Esbenshade, MSN, MBA, RN, NE-BC Professional Development ¡¡ Recognize the variability that exists among patients with hearing loss ¡¡ Define effective communication according to an ADA certified interpreter ¡¡ Outline possible options for effective communication access, including remote video interpreting options Tom R. Cox, PhD CONCURRENT SESSIONS Education What’s Happening in Washington that Affects EDs North 121 A-C ¡¡ The implementation of the Affordable Care Act on EDs Evidence-Based Practice: What’s New and Should You Change Your Practice? North Ballroom 120 B Quality ¡¡ A review of five key papers that influence ED nursing practice ¡¡ Review the research methods of each paper ¡¡ Discuss the practice, education and leadership implications of each paper This course is repeated Saturday 10 – 11:15 am Nicki Gilboy, MS, RN, CEN, FAEN Paula Tanabe, PhD, RN, FAEN, FAAN ¡¡ Washington’s current budget battles and their impact on healthcare ¡¡ Legislation that could affect EDs Richard Mereu, JD Follow the action on #ENALC14 21 ENA Leadership Conference 2014 Friday, March 7 10:30 – 11:45 am 1:45 – 2:45 pm (Continued) 1.0 Contact Hour Communicating During Disasters: Lessons Learned North 122 A-C Safety ¡¡ An outline of the events surrounding the catastrophic Joplin tornado and the direct impact on the Joplin Mercy Hospital ¡¡ Review the timeline and sequence of events from notification, impact, search and rescue, incident command and the value of a variety of communication strategies and plans JAM SESSION We Take Care of Everyone: Ethical Emergency Nursing Practice North 127 AB Safety ¡¡ Outline the ethical obligations of emergency nursing ¡¡ Recall discussion of possible exceptions or conflicts ¡¡ Obligations to specific patient populations presenting to the ED ¡¡ Review examples of the relevance of disaster training and preparation on the Joplin event Lisa A. Wolf, PhD, RN, CEN, FAEN This course is repeated Friday 3:15 – 4:30 pm 1:45 – 3 pm Jeanne J. Venella, DNP, MS, RN, CEN, CPEN 1.25 Contact Hours 11:30 am – 1 pm CONCURRENT SESSIONS You Too Can YouTube North Ballroom 120 B Lunch in the Exhibit Hall North Hall DE Education Noon – 1:30 pm ¡¡ Understand how YouTube is a viable tool for education and professional development departments in healthcare 1 CERP Sponsored Educational Session The ED Pit Crew: Driving Teamwork & Communication North 131 A-C ¡¡ See how YouTube can be used effectively to supplement the delivery of educational and professional development content Discover a new way for your ED pit crew to see patients that optimizes efficiency while improving patient care and staff satisfaction. A team approach at the bedside can reduce patients’ wait time and streamline communication between providers. ¡¡ Learn and discuss the benefits of using the annotation feature in YouTube Attend this free luncheon and learn how the pit crew method can ¡¡ Improve nurse job satisfaction Tom R. Cox, PhD Coaching Champions: From the Court to the Emergency Department North 129 AB Professional Development ¡¡ Recognize the importance of assembling the right team for high performance ¡¡ Increase patient satisfaction scores ¡¡ Overcome the challenge of bringing out the best in each team member each day regardless of the performance environment ¡¡ Build a culture of teamwork ¡¡ Innovate with your entire ED pit crew Pre-registration is required for this event. Visit CEP America at Booth #241 or the ENA Leadership Conference website for additional information. ¡¡ Compare and learn new strategies to lead a winning team Daniel S. Andrews, MBA, RN, CEN Sponsored by 1 – 2 pm Poster Sessions - Meet the Presenters North Hall CDE Lobby ENA Leadership Conference 2014 22 Follow the action on #ENALC14 Friday, March 7 1:45 – 3 pm (Continued) 1.25 Contact Hours CONCURRENT SESSIONS Tackling ED Recidivism: Empower and Engage Your Organization North 124 AB Quality ¡¡ Recognize the challenges emergency departments face today attempting to care for patients with chronic and or complicated health issues who have a high recidivism utilization rate ¡¡ Define the selection method of emergency department patients for inclusion criteria in the ED care planning process ¡¡ Outline how to engage the emergency department staff and partner with patients, their families, the PCP, specialty physicians, inpatient interdisciplinary team members and community organizations Marianne D. Araujo, PhD, RN Dawn Moeller, MHA, BSN, RN, CEN Improving Care of Persons with Sickle Cell Disease in the Emergency Department North 121 A-C Quality ¡¡ A review of sickle cell disease (SCD) a complex disorder with many bio-psychosocial and healthcare implications ¡¡ A review of the Emergency Department Sickle Cell Assessment of Needs and Strengths (ED-SCANS) is a decision support and quality improvement framework that can guide ED practice ¡¡ Discuss the evidence-based guidelines for the management of SCD as released by the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute in 2013 Paula Tanabe, PhD, RN, FAEN, FAAN Emotional Impact and Support for Victimized Emergency Department Workers North 122 A-C Safety ¡¡ Discuss the emotional impact of violence against emergency department workers by patients and visitors ¡¡ Recall support mechanisms used by victimized emergency department workers ¡¡ Recognize personal strategies to deploy after being victimized at work by a patient or patient’s visitor Gordon L. Gillespie, PhD, RN, PHCNS-BC, CEN, CPEN, FAEN 1:45 – 4:30 pm 2.75 Contact Hours DEEP DIVE SESSION Mastering Your Budget North 126 AB Management ¡¡ Review basic budget terms and concepts ¡¡ Learn budget negotiation strategies to promote optimal outcomes ¡¡ Conduct interactive budget calculations to build skills for success Limited capacity; preregistration and ticket required Aaron B. Wolff, BSN, RN, CEN 3:15 – 4:30 pm 1.25 Contact Hours CONCURRENT SESSIONS Global Initiatives to Improve Patient Flow Through the Emergency Department North 127 AB Flow Patient Safety in the ED - Lessons from High Reliability Organizations North 132 A-C Safety ¡¡ Define the attributes of high reliability organizations and how they apply to healthcare ¡¡ Recognize leadership attributes that promote high reliability in healthcare ¡¡ Assess individual behaviors necessary to hardwire high reliability attributes in healthcare ¡¡ An increase in patient volume continues to be a challenge for emergency departments and emergency nurses world-wide ¡¡ Collaborative working can enhance emergency department flow and patient experience ¡¡ Palliative, mental-health and care of the older adult patients are specific groups, where new ways of working can improve emergency department flow Alison Day, MSc, BSc (Hons), RN Carol Oldroyd, MSc, BSc (Hons), PGCE, RGN, RNT ¡¡ Outline case study of high reliability behaviors in emergency nursing Kathy M. Baker, PhD, RN, NE-BC Follow the action on #ENALC14 23 ENA Leadership Conference 2014 Friday, March 7 3:15 – 4:30 pm 3:15 – 6 pm (Continued) 2.75 Contact Hours Facilitators, Barriers and Creative Educational Solutions for Critical Access Hospital (CAH) EDs North 122 A-C DEEP DIVE SESSION Use Communication Styles to Create a Better, Safer Work Environment North 131 AB Flow ¡¡ Describe the findings from the CAH educational study ¡¡ Identify the significance of the educational barriers for emergency nurses in CAHs Safety ¡¡ Describe potential solutions for this practice population Lisa A. Wolf, PhD, RN, CEN, FAEN ¡¡ Sometimes there is incongruence between how we see ourselves and how others (i.e., staff, other departments, patients and families) see us ¡¡ Knowing a colleague’s communication style - and reducing stressors - help us work together Competency is Not a Day: Professional Portfolios North Ballroom 120 B ¡¡ Communication styles can be used to proactively facilitate teamwork as well as troubleshoot problems Professional Development ¡¡ Nurses in most facilities are required to annually validate their competencies ¡¡ Portfolios are used to document a nurse’s experience and competency by placing the responsibility of validation not at the department level but with the nurse ¡¡ Instead of validating in a demonstration or simulation setting, the nurse validates in real-time Limited capacity; preregistration and ticket required Beth A. LaVelle, PhD, RN-BC, CEN Meghan B. LaVelle, DNP, RN, CEN, ACNS-BC 4:45 – 5:45 pm 1.0 Contact Hour This course is repeated Friday, 4:45 – 6 pm JAM SESSION Free-Standing Emergency Departments: Challenges and Benefits North 127 AB Mary Alice Vanhoy, MSN, RN, CEN, CPEN, NREMT-P Team Assessment in the ED North 121 A-C Management Quality ¡¡ Outline the critical steps in planning and building a free-standing ED ¡¡ Identify the need for multi-disciplinary collaboration and a team based approach to emergency care ¡¡ Recognize the importance of training and preparation of the nursing staff ¡¡ Recognize concepts for implementation of team-based emergency care ¡¡ Recognize need and barriers to more definitive care for acute patients ¡¡ Recognize the benefits and challenges of a team-based approach Marilyn D. Singleton, BSN, RN Amy Pasmann, BSN, RN Douglas S. Nelson, MD, FAAP, FACEP 4:45 – 6 pm ED/Behavioral Health Collaboration for Excellence North 124 AB 1.25 Contact Hours CONCURRENT SESSIONS Implementing Sustainable Change: It’s More Than Just Theory North 121 A-C Safety ¡¡ Increases in behavioral health sentinel events in the ED is increasing the need for recognition of high risk behavioral health situations Education ¡¡ Development of patient safety plans is essential to behavioral health patient treatment ¡¡ Staff safety in the care of behavioral health patients is an essential part of planning effective care Susie M. Law, MBA, BSN, RN Sue M. Cadwell, MSN, RN, NE-BC ¡¡ Leading change is a complex task that requires vision, determination, and serious amounts of management intuition ¡¡ Speaker will share experiences and insights into planning and driving change in emergency departments ¡¡ Review a variety of reasons for change and learn five facts to consider when planning and implementing change Communicating During Disasters: Lessons Learned North 129 AB Nicki Gilboy, MS, RN, CEN, FAEN Safety Repeat Course. See Friday 10:30 – 11:45 am for course description Jeanne J. Venella, DNP, MS, RN, CEN, CPEN ENA Leadership Conference 2014 24 Follow the action on #ENALC14 Friday, March 7 4:45 – 6 pm (Continued) Kid-Ready EDs in a Large Healthcare System North Ballroom 120 B Competency is Not a Day: Professional Portfolios North 129 AB Professional Development Repeat course. See Friday 3:15 – 4:30 pm for course description Mary Alice Vanhoy, MSN, RN, CEN, CPEN, NREMT-P Education ¡¡ According to the Institute of Medicine, most pediatric emergency visits occur in non-pediatric emergency departments ¡¡ A joint policy statement issued in 2009 described guidelines for care of children in the ED ¡¡ Understand how a large healthcare system brought 170+ EDs into alignment with the 2009 JPS and readied those EDs to successfully complete the 2013 National Pediatric Readiness Assessment Sue M. Cadwell, MSN, RN, NE-BC Nurse Bullying: Will They Ever Get Full? North 132 A-C Safety ¡¡ Define the concept of nurses “eating their young” ¡¡ Recognize instances of workplace bullying in the personal work culture ¡¡ State strategies to mitigate bullying against emergency nurses Gordon L. Gillespie, PhD, RN, PHCNS-BC, CEN, CPEN, FAEN Care of the Behavioral Health Patient in the ED North 122 A-C 6:30 – 9 pm 2.0 Contact Hours Flow ¡¡ Describe the current state of emergency care for behavioral health patients ¡¡ Identify currently used models of care for this population ¡¡ Describe knowledge, attitudes and behaviors of emergency nurses with regard to this patient population Lisa A. Wolf, PhD, RN, CEN, FAEN At the Table with the CFO: Interpreting Essential Financial Statements North 124 AB Management ¡¡ Define the most common essential financial statements in nursing/healthcare leadership Night SESSION Creative Teaching Strategies in CNE North 132 A-C This is an engaging and hands on workshop designed to assist clinical educators develop creative and interactive instructional methods to support the delivery of fine quality continuing educational products. ¡¡ Describe the process for developing a lesson plan ¡¡ Appraise at least three interactive teaching strategies ¡¡ Develop a “mini” lesson plan on a preferred subject matter of emergency nursing Janet Crawford, MSN, ACNS, BC ¡¡ Recall essential concepts of accounting and their application to financial operations ¡¡ Outline principles and concepts to financial case studies Rhonda M. Morgan, DNP, RN, CCNS, APN Follow the action on #ENALC14 25 ENA Leadership Conference 2014 Saturday, March 8 6 – 8 am ENPC 4th Edition: Updates for 2014 Professional Development 1.5 Contact Hours ¡¡ Discuss the process for identifying and responding to issues in ENPC 4th edition Early Bird Poster Session North Hall CDE Lobby ¡¡ Review changes format and delivery for ENPC 4th edition – 2014 revision 7 am – 6 pm ¡¡ Discuss process for revising the ENPC 4th edition test Paula M. Karnick PhD, ANP-BC, CPNP Speaker Concierge North 125 B 8 – 9:15 am 7:30 am – 6 pm 1.25 contact hours Registration, @ENA Wired and Marketplace Express Open North Hall C CONCURRENT SESSIONS Orientation or Residency: Secrets to Successful Retention of New Employees North Ballroom 120 B 7: 30 am – 1 pm Education ¡¡ Recognize the differences between orientation and nurse residency programs in providing for a safe, qualified, engaged nursing staff 0.5 contact hour Poster Sessions North Hall CDE Lobby ¡¡ Outline the process for conducting departmental SWAT and GAP analyses to identify new employee needs and maximize successful completion of orientation and/or nurse residency programs 8 – 9 am 1.0 contact hour ¡¡ Define how the ENA standards of care, the AACN synergy model and CCNE goals for nurse residency programs can be implemented into your department’s educational plan to provide a measurable, successful new employee transition into your department JAM SESSION Leading a Multi-generational ED Workforce North 126 AB Management Janet E. Abbott Eckhart, EdD, MSN, RN ¡¡ Recognize the four values, beliefs and attitudes of a multi-generational workforce ¡¡ Define leadership strategies for working with a multigenerational workforce in the ED ¡¡ Apply content learned and personal knowledge from ED leadership to case scenarios Rose O. Sherman, EdD, RN, NEA-BC, FAAN Stuck in the Middle with You: What to Do with ESI Level 3 Patients North 121 A-C Flow ¡¡ Identify strategies to expedite the treatment of ESI level 3 patients ¡¡ Discuss which strategies may be appropriate for different facilities 8 – 9:15 am ¡¡ Understand advantages and disadvantages of implementing different flow strategies 1.25 contact hours HAND-OFF SESSION NEW TNCC 7th Edition North 127 AB Laurie Maxwell, MSN, ARNP-BC, NE-BC, CEN Carol Hallisey, MSN, MHA, BSN, RN, CCRN Professional Development “The Office” Leadership Lessons North 122 A-C ¡¡ Review content changes for TNCC 7th edition Management ¡¡ Discuss changes and in format and delivery for TNCC 7th edition ¡¡ Recognize the missteps of leadership ¡¡ List effective leadership skills ¡¡ Review process of rollout for instructors ¡¡ Recognize how an engaged leader develops engaged staff Theresa L. Hamood, BSN, RN ENA Leadership Conference 2014 26 Follow the action on #ENALC14 DEMAND EVIDENCE AND THINK CRITICALLY Here’s what some are saying about the IENR Research Lounge: “Experienced researchers with great ideas for us first time researchers” “Was helped to bring ideas into realistic goals for dissertation” “It was an opportunity to discuss potential research projects with experts, and get their thoughts” Experts will be ready to help you DEmaND EvIDENcE aND THINk cRITIcaLLy at the IENR Research Lounge Saturday, march 8, 8 – 11 am, North 126c For more information about IENR go to www.ena.org/ienr Saturday, March 8 8 – 9:15 am 9:15 am – 1:45 pm (Continued) What’s Going on in Your Emergency Department and How You Can Finally Fix It North 124 AB Exhibit Hall Open North Hall DE 9:15 – 10:15 am Management ¡¡ Identify potential causes of poor clinical decision making ¡¡ Recognize programs that facilitate individual critical thinking skills Refreshments with Exhibitors North Hall DE ¡¡ Determine programs that facilitate staff communication and teamwork 10 – 11 am Lisa A. Wolf, PhD, RN, CEN, FAEN 1.0 contact hour It’s All Fun and Games Until SWAT Raids the ED: Lessons Learned North 129 AB Safety ¡¡ Define the Active Shooter case study at the University of New Mexico Hospitals (UNMH). Review the events that led up to the actual event and the event itself JAM SESSION What’s Your Motive: Strategies to Mitigate Lateral Violence North 126 AB Education ¡¡ Lateral violence and bullying are prevalent in the nursing community ¡¡ Discuss the prevalence of active shooting events in the United States, particularly in healthcare facilities. Case review of similar events in healthcare settings ¡¡ Understanding the motive behind violence and bullying is key to successful team building and the promotion of a healthy workplace ¡¡ Describe actions that were taken at UNMH and potential confounding factors, including overwhelming police response and closure of the ED and hospital ¡¡ Compare and contrast constructive and destructive motives for communication and team building in nursing AnnMarie Papa, DNP, RN, CEN, NE-BC, FAEN, FAAN Michael J. Chicarelli, MSN, RN, CEN Compassion Fatigue North 132 A-C 10 – 11:15 am 1.25 contact hours Safety ¡¡ Caregiving can take an emotional, physical, professional, and relational toll. ED nurses, by the nature of their work, are at risk for compassion fatigue Hand-Off Session Developing a Successful Emergency Nursing Fellowship North 127 AB ¡¡ Discuss the first study to look at an intervention aimed at ED nurses to prevent and treat compassion fatigue Education ¡¡ Illustrate the design and implementation of an emergency nursing fellowship program ¡¡ Discuss results of a qualitative study examining the effectiveness of an educational program on preventing and treating compassion fatigue in Emergency Nurses ¡¡ Identify barriers and opportunities in sustaining an emergency nursing fellowship program This course is repeated Saturday 2:45 – 4 pm ¡¡ Evaluate successes in emergency nursing education and professional development Kathleen M. Flarity, DNP, PhD, CEN, CFRN, FAEN 8 – 11 am Remediation in Emergency Nursing North 127 AB IENR Research Lounge North 126 C Education ¡¡ Identify the role of remediation in emergency nursing practice 9 – 10 am ¡¡ Illustrate the practical application of ENA and ANA Scope and Standards, competence, and remediation Poster Sessions - Meet the Presenters North Hall CDE Lobby ¡¡ Identify the theoretical foundations of a remediation plan 9 am – 6 pm Gayle E. Walker-Cillo, MSN/Ed, RN, CEN, CPEN, FAEN Andrew Harding MS, CEN, NEA-C, FACHE, FAHA, FAEN ENA Foundation Open North Hall C ENA Leadership Conference 2014 28 Follow the action on #ENALC14 Saturday, March 8 10 – 11:15 am (Continued) 1.25 contact hours CONCURRENT SESSIONS “I Learned So Much!” Running a Successful Simulation Educational Event North Ballroom 120 B Education ¡¡ Theory and research supporting simulation as an educational method ¡¡ The process for planning a simulation educational event ¡¡ The process for implementing a simulation event This course is repeated Saturday 1:15 – 2:30 pm Jennifer Y. Denno, MSN, RN, CEN Customer Service and Service Recovery: Strategies for Success North 121 A-C Management ¡¡ Identify processes and opportunities to improve operations and customer service by using operational assessment ¡¡ Understand the differences between customer service and service recovery and their impact on departmental outcome measures ¡¡ Improve ED operations using customer service and service recovery strategies Janet E. Abbott Eckhart, EdD, MSN, RN Work Life Balance is Easy if You’re the Energizer Bunny North 122 A-C Professional Development ¡¡ Recognize how to maintain balance in your life ¡¡ List staff management successes ¡¡ Define ways to keep the momentum going Theresa L. Hamood, BSN, RN Survey! For Survey’s Sake, What We Can/Can’t Accomplish with Surveys North 124 AB Quality ¡¡ Healthcare providers have become inundated with surveys; make sure you know the basics of surveying ¡¡ Through group interactions, we will analyze the strengths and weaknesses of surveying ¡¡ Through fun and interactive experiences, we will determine ways to both improve our scores and our experiences with patient satisfaction surveys Evidence-Based Practice: What’s New and Should You Change Your Practice? North 129 AB Quality Repeat course. See Friday 10:30 – 11:45 am for course description Nicki Gilboy, MS, RN, CEN, FAEN Paula Tanabe, PhD, RN, FAEN, FAAN What’s the Score? Pediatric Early Warning Scores North 132 A-C Safety ¡¡ Pediatric early warning scores can be a useful assessment tool to identify an ill or clinically deteriorating pediatric patient ¡¡ Numerous tools are available and emergency nurses must question their validity before use ¡¡ Due to the varying physiological parameters of this patient group, formulating a standardized tool is challenging Alison Day, MSc, BSc (Hons), RN Carol Oldroyd, MSc, BSc (Hons), PGCE, RGN, RNT 11:30 am – 1 pm ENA Candidates Election Forum North Ballroom 120 A All ENA members are invited to attend the ENA Candidates Election Forum to learn about the 2014 candidates. A box lunch will be served. Candidates will provide information about their backgrounds in emergency nursing, their previous ENA involvement at the local, state and national levels, their vision for the future of emergency nursing as well as for ENA and their qualifications for holding a national ENA office. Lunch in the Exhibit Hall North Hall DE 1:15 – 2:15 pm 1.25 contact hours JAM SESSIONS Influencing Culture: Lead your ED to a Culture of Safety, Excellence and Caring North Ballroom 120 B Management Repeat Course. See Friday 10:30 – 11:30 am for course description Joshua D. McCabe, MSN, RN, CEN Jacob L. Gibson, BSN, RN, NREMT-I Follow the action on #ENALC14 29 ENA Leadership Conference 2014 Saturday, March 8 1:15 – 2:15 pm 1:15 – 2:30 pm (Continued) 1.25 contact hours Normalization of Deviance: Identifying and Preventing Safety Shortcuts North 127 AB CONCURRENT SESSIONS “I Learned So Much!” Running a Successful Simulation Educational Event North 122 A-C Safety ¡¡ Despite increased attention to patient safety, medical errors still account for a significant number of injuries and deaths every year Education Repeat course. See Saturday 10 – 11:15 am for course description ¡¡ Understand how a shortcut culture can jeopardize safety mechanisms Jennifer Y. Denno, MSN, RN, CEN ¡¡ Discover how “Normalization of Deviance” can be identified and corrected to get your safety program back on track Daniel S. Andrews, MBA, RN, CEN Improving Patient Throughput: Proven Strategies that Work! North 124 AB Flow ¡¡ Understand how to define and use ED data to enhance ED patient throughput and improve revenue 1:15 – 2:30 pm ¡¡ Discuss how to evaluate ED throughput processes by identifying - Front, Middle, and Back-end performances 1.25 contact hours HAND-OFF SESSION Talk to the Animals: Funding through Community Civic Organizations North 121 A-C ¡¡ Identify best practices that will improve patient throughput in your ED Carol Hallisey, MHA, BSN, RN, CCRN Laurie Maxwell, MSN, ARNP-BC, NE-BC, CEN Professional Development ¡¡ Discover how to supplement funding gaps within healthcare facilities by partnering with civic and community based organizations that have similar goals Management by Numbers North 129 AB Management ¡¡ Explore these organizations and their mission to see how partnership can be developed to assist you in meeting community healthcare needs ¡¡ Define how to create a culture that nourishes staff and allows for excellence ¡¡ Discuss steps necessary to create an accountable culture that focuses on high reliability Mary Alice Vanhoy, MSN, RN, CEN, CPEN, NREMT-P ¡¡ Define the importance of staff satisfaction Creating a Culture of Philanthropy North 121 A-C Theresa L. Hamood, BSN, RN Professional Development ¡¡ Why is philanthropic development important to our profession? Reflective Practice: a Solution to Mitigate the Second Victim Phenomenon North 132 A-C ¡¡ Learn how the ENA Foundation is unique Safety ¡¡ Explore what the ENA Foundation means to emergency nursing, how we do it and what you can do to help advance the practice of emergency nursing ¡¡ The second victim phenomenon is a harsh reality of healthcare ¡¡ Unanticipated clinical events have a profound effect on even the most seasoned nurse, resulting in what is known as “Second Victim Phenomenon” Seleem Choudhury, MSN, MBA, RN, CEN ¡¡ Reflective practice is an interactive process that allows nurses to explore and attempt to understand issues surrounding these traumatic and often career changing events AnnMarie Papa, DNP, RN, CEN, NE-BC, FAEN, FAAN ENA Leadership Conference 2014 30 Follow the action on #ENALC14 Saturday, March 8 1:15 – 4 pm 2.75 Contact Hours 2:45 – 4 pm 1.25 contact hours Deep Dive Session Engaging Your Patients: Surefire Strategies to Empathize, Interview and Educate North 126 AB Quality ¡¡ Powerful methods for opening and closing patient interviews with impact. Learn to immediately connect with patients ¡¡ Key elements to successfully interviewing and educating patients. Discover the secrets to successful patient interactions ¡¡ Show you care through skillfully using empathy. All the strategies presented will make your patient satisfaction scores go through the roof Limited capacity; preregistration and ticket required Edward Leigh, MA 2:45 – 3:45 pm 1.0 contact hour JAM SESSION The Violent ED Patient Sparks Housewide Policy to Legislative Change North 127 AB Safety ¡¡ Impact of an ED Workplace Violence prevention program leads to housewide interdisciplinary approach ¡¡ Comprehensive approach to workplace violence results in enhanced safety through housewide training, increased reporting of violence, new considerations of facility design to prevent workplace violence, community awareness and legislative change ¡¡ Why involvement of state and local law enforcement is imperative Linda F. Robinson, BSN, RN, CEN, CFN CONCURRENT SESSIONS Lead Your ED Staff to a Program of Research North Ballroom 120 B Education ¡¡ Outline the key components of the Iowa Model of Evidence-Based Practice Applied and describe pros and cons of building a program of research ¡¡ Recognize the impact of a program of ED nursing research ¡¡ Discuss three institutional resources and sources of input/support that can be leveraged when implementing a research program Jessica P. Castner, PhD, RN, CEN Escaping the Shackles of PowerPoint North 121 A-C Education ¡¡ Discuss alternative strategies that can be used to improve the learner centered environment in an educational setting and foster the clinical reasoning skills of RNs ¡¡ Demonstrate the use of alternative media and low fidelity simulation techniques that can be used to engage RNs in clinical reasoning ¡¡ Describe ways for the nurse educator to improve their presentation skills to more effectively engage participants Michael D. Moon, MSN, RN, CNS-CC, CEN, FAEN Research to Practice: Changing the Way We Manage Behavioral Health Patients in the Emergency Department North 122 A-C Flow ¡¡ Identify practice recommendations discussed in the ENA Behavioral Health White Paper literature review ¡¡ Describe findings of the ENA Behavioral Health Study ¡¡ Explain ways in which research findings can positively influence emergency nursing practice related to behavioral health patients Anne P. Manton, PhD, APRN, PMHNP-BC, FAEN, FAAN Follow the action on #ENALC14 31 ENA Leadership Conference 2014 Saturday, March 8 2:45 – 4 pm 4:15 – 5:45 pm (Continued) 1.0 contact hour Building Bridges - Moving From Participant to Presenter North 124 AB Professional Development ¡¡ Recognize a topic of interest or expertise to develop into a formal presentation ¡¡ Select presentation aids to develop a topic into a formal presentation ¡¡ Outline the selected topic to create a course description and objectives Alicia C. Pruitt, DNP, RN, FNP, CEN, CPEN, CWR Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) Future of Nursing Recommendations - Implications for Emergency Nurses North 129 AB General Session Triumph in the Face of Violence North Ballroom 120 CD Quality Managing multiple patient events in the ED can be challenging. When events result from violent crime or terrorism, emergency nurses may experience additional stress and conflict. This special extended panel presentation will explore some of the unique and difficult issues that may arise from such tragedies. ¡¡ Relate lessons learned from the tragedies of our time: Aurora, Sandy Hook, Tucson, and Boston ¡¡ Outline ethical considerations when caring for suspects and victims within the same ED ¡¡ Illustrate best practices that have demonstrated how strong teams can get through anything Professional Development ¡¡ List the National Structure that has been established by the RWJF Helen Kenny, BSN, RN, CEN Mark Mayes, MHA, BSN, RN, CEN Daniel J. Nadworny, BSN, RN Michelle Ziemba, MSN, RN ¡¡ Define specific actions that Emergency Nurses should take to implement these changes in Emergency Nursing ¡¡ Recognize opportunities to personally embrace this effort Kathy M. Baker, PhD, RN, NE-BC Compassion Fatigue North 132 A-C Safety Repeat course. See Saturday 8 – 9:15 am for course description Kathleen M. Flarity, DNP, PhD, CEN, CFRN, FAEN ENA Leadership Conference 2014 32 Follow the action on #ENALC14 ENA Closing Celebration – Southwestern Style! Saturday, March 8 7 – 9:30 pm North Ballroom 120 CD Join 2014 ENA President Deena Brecher, MSN, RN, APN, ACNS-BC, CEN, CPEN and the 2014 ENA Board of Directors as we celebrate the final night of Leadership Conference 2014! The Living Traditions Dance Troupe is led by Derrick Suwaima Davis (Hopi/ Choctaw), the only 6 time Hoop Dance World Champion. This Inter Tribal group is comprised of members from the Southwest including Hopi, Apache and Dine’. Dressed in beautiful hand-made regalia representing their Tribes and utilizing traditional instruments, these artists express through music and movement their interpretations of songs and dances that celebrate their heritage. Follow the action on #ENALC14 33 ENA Leadership Conference 2014 Sunday, March 9 7:30 am – 12:45 pm 9:45 – 11 am 1.25 Contact Hours Registration, @ENA Wired and Marketplace Express Open North Hall C CONCURRENT SESSIONS Decreasing the Length of Stay (LOS) with that Corner in Your ED North 121 A-C 7 am – 12:30 pm Flow Speaker Concierge North 125 B ¡¡ With national ED overcrowding, learn how one ED carved out space for initiating care for higher acuity patients 8 – 9:30 am ¡¡ This innovative change decreased wait times and LOS 1.0 Contact Hour ¡¡ Research results supported a decreased LOS and other positive outcomes. The impact on flow for an ED flexible care area (FCA) will be shared Jayne K. McGrath, MS, RN, CEN, CCRN, CNS-BC Anne LeGare, BSN, RN Survivor Freestanding ED: How to Outwit, Outlast, and Outplay North 121 A-C Management ¡¡ Define the key components to successful planning phases of a freestanding emergency department ¡¡ Outline the sequential timeline required in meeting the opening go-live of a freestanding emergency department ¡¡ Recognize the rewards and challenges of the freestanding emergency department Julie L. Lester, BSN, RN, CEN Bridging the Gap: Improving Interdepartmental Relations Through Immersion North 122 A-C Professional Development ¡¡ Relations are often strained between the emergency department and inpatient units. A lack of understanding and collegiality are often the cause. General Session Performance Under Pressure - Delivering Exceptional Care When Times are Tough North Ballroom 120 CD ¡¡ Learn to excel under extreme pressure from someone who’s served in the trenches ¡¡ This course introduces the concept of creating a CE bridge course between these different units, allowing nurses to learn about different specialties and experience them firsthand ¡¡ Overcome burnout and renew your passion when resources are scarce and demands are high ¡¡ Methods for course development, obtaining buy-in, and evaluating impact will be discussed Professional Development Andrea C. Perry, MSN, RN, CNL, CEN ¡¡ Take home practical strategies to deliver greater impact when you go back to work on Monday Dan Diamond, MD, FAAFP 9 am – 12:45 pm ENA Foundation FUN-raising Open North Hall C ENA Leadership Conference 2014 34 Follow the action on #ENALC14 Sunday, March 9 9:45 – 11 am (Continued) 1.25 Contact Hours “Another Cab Voucher?”– Managing Frequent Visitors North 122 A-C Management CONCURRENT SESSIONS Sharing Shared Governance in a Busy ED North 129 AB Professional Development ¡¡ Describe the history of Nursing Shared Governance ¡¡ Define the characteristics of the frequent ED visitor ¡¡ State the responsibilities Accountable Care Organizations have for frequent visitors in the ED ¡¡ Select appropriate resources, alternative solutions and care options for the frequent ED visitor ¡¡ Define the principals and main components of Nursing Shared Governance Sue A. Behrens, DNP, RN, ACNS-BC, NEA-BC ¡¡ Identify challenges, barriers and innovative ways to implementing a Nursing Shared Governance model in an emergency setting Stop! How Evaluations and Managers Help Stop Workplace Violence North 124 AB Elizabeth E. Johnson-Salerno, MSN, APRN, PCNS-BC, CPEN Difficult Airway Response Teams (DART) in the Hospital Setting North 124 AB Safety ¡¡ Define potential benefits of implementing a DART team. Review morbidity and mortality rates in organizations with DART ¡¡ Understand the basic components of a DART team and DART alerts ¡¡ Define challenges in creating a DART team ¡¡ Understand the cost of specialized equipment needed for the DART carts Michael J. Chicarelli, MSN, RN, CEN 11:15 am – 12:30 pm 1.25 Contact Hours CONCURRENT SESSIONS Beyond Benner: New Graduates into the Emergency Department North Ballroom 120 B Management ¡¡ Homicide is the leading cause of death for women in the workplace ¡¡ Learn how to define the epidemic of workplace violence ¡¡ Understand the trends and cycles in workplace violence, and how it’s affecting healthcare ¡¡ Analyze and develop methods for managers to use with employees to detect and prevent acts of workplace violence Jacob L. Gibson, BSN, RN, NREMT-I Implementing Evidence-Based Practice Using the Johns Hopkins Evidence-Based Practice Model North 129 AB Quality ¡¡ Define the Evidence-Based Practice (EBP) model as it is used at Johns Hopkins and the importance of selecting a specific model for research methods ¡¡ Outline the three phases and 18 steps of the Johns Hopkins EBP model Janet E. Abbott Eckhart, EdD, MSN, RN EDUcation ¡¡ Lessons learned in coordinating the orientation of new graduate nurses ¡¡ From checklists to progress meetings to preceptors ¡¡ Successfully transitioning new graduates to team members Elizabeth A. Mizerek, MSN, RN, CEN, CPEN, FN-CSA Build It and They Will Come: Freestanding ED’s North Ballroom 120 B Flow ¡¡ When and why to develop a free-standing emergency department ¡¡ Unique needs of the free-standing ED ¡¡ Leadership difficulties with free-standing ED operations Freda G. Lyon, MSN, MHA, RN, NE-BC Follow the action on #ENALC14 35 ENA Leadership Conference 2014 Faculty Janet E. Abbott Eckhart, EdD, MSN, RN, Educator & Researcher, James H. Quillen VA Medical Center, Mountain Home, TN; Adjunct Faculty for Bluefield College School of Nursing, Bluefield, VA and Tusculum College School of Nursing, Greenville, TN Daniel S. Andrews, MBA, RN, CEN, Director of Emergency Services, Baptist Health Richmond, Richmond, KY Marianne D. Araujo, PhD, RN, VP Nursing, CNE, Advocate Good Shepherd Hospital, Barrington, IL Kathy M. Baker, PhD, RN, NE-BC, Nursing Director Patient Care Support and Emergency Services, VCU Health System, Richmond, VA Sue A. Behrens, DNP, RN, ACNS-BC, NEA-BC, Director ED/CDU/Trauma Services, OSF St. Francis Medical Center, Peoria, IL Deena Brecher, MSN, RN, APN, ACNS-BC, CEN, CPEN, Clinical Nurse Specialist, DuPont Hospital for Children, Wilmington, DE Sue M. Cadwell, MSN, RN, NE-BC, Director, ED, HCA Healthcare, Nashville, TN Jessica P. Castner, PhD, RN, CEN, Research Assistant Professor, University at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY Michael J. Chicarelli, MSN, RN, CEN, Executive Director of Emergency Services, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM Seleem Choudhury, MSN, MBA, RN, CEN, Chief Nursing Officer, Northeastern Vermont Regional Hospital, St. Johnsbury, VT Tom R. Cox, PhD, Associate Professor, San Antonio College, San Antonio, TX Janet Crawford, MSN, ACNS, BC, ANCC Lead Nurse Planner, Emergency Nurses Association, Des Plaines, IL Alison Day, MSc, BSc (Hons), RN, Senior Lecturer in Emergency Nursing, Coventry University, Coventry, UK Jennifer Y. Denno, MSN, RN, CEN, Clinical Nurse Educator, Sutter Medical Center, Sacramento, CA ENA Leadership Conference 2014 Dan Diamond, MD, FAAFP, Clinical Assistant Professor, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, WA Gloria F. Donnelly, PhD, RN, FAAN, FCCP, Dean and Professor, College of Nursing and Health Professions, Drexel University; Editor in Chief, Holistic Nursing Practice, Philadelphia, PA Angie K. Esbenshade, MSN, MBA, RN, NE-BC, Senior ED Specialist Coach, Studer Group, Gulf Breeze, FL Kathleen M. Flarity, DNP, PhD, CEN, CFRN, FAEN, Emergency CNS/Nurse Scientist Memorial Hospital, University of Colorado Health. Colonel, MA to the Assistant AF Surgeon General, HQ, USAF, Washington DC Jacob L. Gibson, BSN, RN, NREMT-I, Police Officer, RN / EMT-I, Madison County Hospital, London, OH Nicki Gilboy, MS, RN, CEN, FAEN, ACNO Emergency Medicine, UMass Memorial Medical Center, Worcester, MA Gordon L. Gillespie, PhD, RN, PHCNS-BC, CEN, CPEN, FAEN, Assistant Professor & Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Nurse Faculty Scholar, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH Carol Hallisey, MHA, BSN, RN, CCRN, Sr. Specialist Consultant, ED & Patient Throughput, Tenet Healthcare, Dallas, TX Theresa L. Hamood, BSN, RN, Director - Emergency Trauma Center, Borgess Medical Center, Kalamazoo, MI Andrew Harding, MS, CEN, NEA-C, FACHE, FAHA, FAEN, Associate Chief Nursing Officer, Southcoast Health System, Fall River, MA Michael Hastings, MS, RN, CEN, Trauma Program Manager, Dell Children’s Medical Center, Austin, TX Elizabeth Johnson-Salerno, MSN, APRN, PCNS-BC, CPEN, Emergency Department Clinical Nurse Specialist Consultant, Nemours/A.I. Dupont Hospital for Children, Wilmington, DE 36 Paula M. Karnick PhD, ANP-BC, CPNP Director of the Institute for Emergency Nursing Education, Emergency Nurses Association, Des Plaines, IL Helen Kenny, BSN, RN, CEN, Assistant Patient Services Manager, Yale New Haven Hospital-St. Raphael Campus, New Haven, CT Beth A. LaVelle, PhD, RN-BC, CEN, Education Coordinator, Westfields Hospital, New Richmond, WI Meghan B. LaVelle, DNP, RN, CEN, ACNS-BC, Emergency Department Staff RN, Woodwinds Health Campus, Woodbury, MN Susie M. Law, MBA, BSN, RN, VP Clinical Operations, MidAmerica Division, Kansas City, MO Ursula Lawrence, MSN, RN, Chief Nursing Officer, Piedmont Medical Center, Rock Hill, SC Anne LeGare, BSN, RN, Nurse Clinician, University of Wisconsin - Hospital and Clinics, Madison, WI Edward Leigh, MA, Founder & Director, Center for Healthcare Communication, Cleveland, OH Julie L. Lester, BSN, RN, CEN, RN Nurse Manager, Medical Center of the Rockies, Greeley Emergency Center, Greeley, CO Freda G. Lyon, MSN, MHA, RN, NE-BC, Director of Emergency Services, Gwinnett Medical Center, Lawrenceville, GA Anne P. Manton, PhD, APRN, PMHNP-BC, FAEN, FAAN, Psychiatric Mental Health Nurse Practitioner, Cape Cod Hospital, Bourne, MA Laurie Maxwell, MSN, ARNP-BC, NE-BC, CEN, Sr. Specialist Consultant, ED & Patient Throughput, Tenet Healthcare Corporation, Dallas, TX Mark Mayes, MHA, BSN, RN, CEN, Executive Director of Emergency Services, Trauma, and Performance Excellence, UCLA, Los Angeles, CA Joshua D. McCabe, MSN, RN, CEN, Manager, Emergency Department, Sharp Memorial Hospital, San Diego, CA Follow the action on #ENALC14 Faculty Jayne K. McGrath, MS, RN, CEN, CCRN, CNS-BC, Clinical Nurse Specialist, University of Wisconsin Hospital & Clinics, Madison, WI Richard Mereu, JD, Chief Government Relations Officer, Emergency Nurses Association, Washington DC Elizabeth A. Mizerek, MSN, RN, CEN, CPEN, FN-CSA, Emergency Department Nurse Educator, Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital Hamilton, Hamilton, NJ Dawn Moeller, MHA, BSN, RN, CEN, Clinical Manager for Emergency and Trauma Services, Advocate Good Shepherd Hospital, Barrington, IL Michael D. Moon, MSN, RN, CNS-CC, CEN, FAEN, Instructor, University of the Incarnate Word, San Antonio, TX Rhonda M. Morgan, DNP, RN, CCNS, APN, Associate Professor, King University, Bristol, TN Daniel J. Nadworny, BSN, RN, Clinical Manager, ED, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, MA Douglas S. Nelson, MD, FAAP, FACEP, Medical Director, Primary Children’s Medical Center, Salt Lake City, UT Carol Oldroyd, MSc, BSC (Hons), PGCE, RGN, RNT, Senior Lecturer in Adult Nursing, Coventry University, Coventry, UK Catherine Olson, MSN, RN, Director, Institute for Quality, Safety, and Injury Prevention, Emergency Nurses Association, Des Plaines, IL AnnMarie Papa, DNP, RN, CEN, NE-BC, FAEN, FAAN, Clinical Director, Medical and Emergency Nursing, Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA Amy Pasmann, BSN, RN, Nursing Director Emergency Department and Rapid Treatment Unit, Primary Children’s Hospital, Salt Lake City, UT Andrea C. Perry, MSN, RN, CNL, CEN, Staff Nurse III, Sutter Roseville Medical Center, Roseville, CA Follow the action on Alicia C. Pruitt, DNP, RN, FNP, CEN, CPEN, CWR, Nurse Practitioner, Hospital Physician Partners/Lovelace Women’s Hospital, Albuquerque, NM Linda F. Robinson, BSN, RN, CEN, CFN, Staff Nurse, St. Elizabeth Healthcare, Edgewood, KY Rose O. Sherman, EdD, RN, NEA-BC, FAAN, Professor and Director, Nursing Leadership Institute, Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton, FL Marilyn D. Singleton, BSN, RN, Site Manager, Bethesda Arrow Springs, Lebanon, OH Tomi St. Mars, MSN, RN, CEN, FAEN, Chief, Office of Injury Prevention, Arizona Department of Health Services, Gilbert, AZ Kathy Szumanski, MSN, RN, NE-BC, Chief Nursing Officer, Emergency Nurses Association, Des Plaines, IL Paula Tanabe, PhD, RN, FAEN, FAAN, Associate Professor, Duke University, Durham, NC Mary Alice Vanhoy, MSN, RN, CEN, CPEN, NREMT-P, Nurse Manager, Shore Emergency Center at Queenstown, Queenstown, MD Jeanne Venella, DNP, MS, RN, CEN, CPEN, Clinical Practice Specialist, Nuvon Inc, Philadelphia, PA Gayle E. Walker-Cillo, MSN/Ed, RN, CEN, CPEN, FAEN, Clinical Specialist, Morristown Medical Center, Morristown, NJ Lisa A. Wolf, PhD, RN, CEN, FAEN, Director, Institute of Emergency Nursing Research, Emergency Nurses Association, Des Plaines, IL Aaron B. Wolff, BSN, RN, CEN, President, Vital Operations Consulting, Redding, CA Michelle Ziemba, MSN, RN, Director of Trauma and Emergency Services, The University of Arizona Medical Center - University Campus, Tucson, AZ #ENALC14 37 ENA Leadership Conference 2014 Faculty Disclosures It is the policy of the Emergency Nurses Association, as an ANCC accredited provider of continuing medical education, to disclose the relationship between the speakers and the proprietary entities which provide support to the conference or are discussed within the context of a presentation. Planning Committee members, faculty and poster presenters are required to disclose to program participants any financial interests with a commercial entity. Disclosures do not suggest bias but provide program participants with information relevant to evaluation of the guideline contents. The following Leadership Conference 2014 Planning Committee members have returned disclosure forms indicating that they have an affiliation or financial interest in any organization(s) that may have direct interest in the subject matter of his/her presentation(s): Planning Committee Alicia R. Dean, MSN, RN, APRN, CNS, Clinical Manager, Vidacare, River Ridge, LA Commercial Interest: Vidacare The following Leadership Conference 2014 Planning Committee members have returned disclosure forms indicating that they have no financial interests with any commercial entity that may effect the content integrity of his/her presentation. Planning Committee Deena Brecher, MSN, RN, APN, ACNS-BC, CEN, CPEN, Clinical Nurse Specialist, DuPont Hospital for Children, Wilmington, DE Kevin F. McFarlane, BSN, RN, CEN, CPEN, RN Supervisor, University of New Mexico Hospital Albuquerque, NM Michael Hastings, MS, RN, CEN, Trauma Program Manager, Dell Children’s Medical Center, Austin, TX Mari L. Hoover-McGarry, RN, CEN, CCRN, Trauma Resuscitation RN, Delray Medical Center, Delray Beach, FL Benjamin E. Marett, MSN, RN, CEN, CCRN, FAEN, Director of Education, Piedmont Medical Center, Rock Hill, SC Tiffiny Strever, BSN, RN, CEN, Trauma Program Manager, Maricopa Integrated Health System, Phoenix, AZ ENA Leadership Conference 2014 The following Leadership Conference 2014 Planning faculty members have returned disclosure forms indicating that they have no financial interests with any commercial entity that may effect the content integrity of his/her presentation. Faculty Janet E. Abbott Eckhart, EdD, MSN, RN, Educator & Researcher, James H. Quillen VA Medical Center, Mountain Home, TN; Adjunct Faculty for Bluefield College School of Nursing, Bluefield, VA and Tusculum College School of Nursing, Greenville, TN Daniel S. Andrews, MBA, RN, CEN, Director of Emergency Services, Baptist Health Richmond, Richmond, KY Marianne D. Araujo, PhD, RN, VP Nursing, CNE, Advocate Good Shepherd Hospital, Barrington, IL Kathy M. Baker, PhD, RN, NE-BC, Nursing Director Patient Care Support and Emergency Services, VCU Health System, Richmond, VA Sue A. Behrens, DNP, RN, ACNS-BC, NEA-BC, Director ED/CDU/Trauma Services, OSF St. Francis Medical Center, Peoria, IL Deena Brecher, MSN, RN, APN, ACNS-BC, CEN, CPEN, Clinical Nurse Specialist, DuPont Hospital for Children, Wilmington, DE Sue M. Cadwell, MSN, RN, NE-BC, Director, ED, HCA Healthcare, Nashville, TN Jessica P. Castner, PhD, RN, CEN, Research Assistant Professor, University at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY Michael J. Chicarelli, MSN, RN, CEN, Executive Director of Emergency Services, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM Seleem Choudhury, MSN, MBA, RN, CEN, Chief Nursing Officer, Northeastern Vermont Regional Hospital, St. Johnsbury, VT Tom R. Cox, PhD, Associate Professor, San Antonio College, San Antonio, TX Janet Crawford, MSN, ACNS, BC, ANCC Lead Nurse Planner, Emergency Nurses Association, Des Plaines, IL 38 Alison Day, MSc, BSc (Hons), RN, Senior Lecturer in Emergency Nursing, Coventry University, Coventry, UK Jennifer Y. Denno, MSN, RN, CEN, Clinical Nurse Educator, Sutter Medical Center, Sacramento, CA Dan Diamond, MD, FAAFP, Clinical Assistant Professor, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, WA Gloria F. Donnelly, PhD, RN, FAAN, FCCP, Dean and Professor, College of Nursing and Health Professions Drexel University; Editor in Chief, Holistic Nursing Practice, Philadelphia, PA Angie K. Esbenshade, MSN, MBA, RN, NE-BC, Senior ED Specialist Coach, Studer Group, Gulf Breeze, FL Kathleen M. Flarity, DNP, PhD, CEN, CFRN, FAEN, Emergency CNS/Nurse Scientist, Memorial Hospital, University of Colorado Health. Colonel, MA to the Assistant AF Surgeon General, HQ, USAF, Washington DC Jacob L. Gibson, BSN, RN, NREMT-I, Police Officer, RN / EMT-I, Madison County Hospital, London, OH Gordon L. Gillespie, PhD, RN, PHCNS-BC, CEN, CPEN, FAEN, Assistant Professor & Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Nurse Faculty Scholar, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH Nicki Gilboy, MS, RN, CEN, FAEN, ACNO Emergency Medicine, UMass Memorial Medical Center, Worcester, MA Carol Hallisey, MHA, BSN, RN, CCRN, Sr. Specialist Consultant, ED & Patient Throughput, Tenet Healthcare, Dallas, TX Theresa L. Hamood, BSN, RN, Director - Emergency Trauma Center, Borgess Medical Center, Kalamazoo, MI Andrew Harding, MS, CEN, NEA-C, FACHE, FAHA, FAEN, Associate Chief Nursing Officer, Southcoast Health System, Fall River, MA Michael Hastings, MS, RN, CEN, Trauma Program Manager, Dell Children’s Medical Center, Austin, TX Follow the action on #ENALC14 Faculty Disclosures Elizabeth Johnson-Salerno, MSN, APRN, PCNS-BC, CPEN, Emergency Department Clinical Nurse Specialist Consultant, Nemours/A.I. Dupont Hospital for Children, Wilmington, DE Paula M. Karnick PhD, ANP-BC, CPNP Director of the Institute for Emergency Nursing Education, Emergency Nurses Association, Des Plaines, IL Helen Kenny, BSN, RN, CEN, Assistant Patient Services Manager, Yale New Haven Hospital-St. Raphael Campus, New Haven, CT Beth A. LaVelle, PhD, RN-BC, CEN, Education Coordinator, Westfields Hospital, New Richmond, WI Meghan B. LaVelle, DNP, RN, CEN, ACNS-BC, Emergency Department Staff RN, Woodwinds Health Campus, Woodbury, MN Susie M. Law, MBA, BSN, RN, VP Clinical Operations, MidAmerica Division, Kansas City, MO Ursula Lawrence, MSN, RN, Chief Nursing Officer, Piedmont Medical Center, Rock Hill, SC Anne LeGare, BSN, RN, Nurse Clinician, University of Wisconsin - Hospital and Clinics, Madison, WI Edward Leigh, MA, Founder & Director, Center for Healthcare Communication, Cleveland, OH Julie L. Lester, BSN, RN, CEN, RN Nurse Manager, Medical Center of the Rockies, Greeley Emergency Center, Greeley, CO Freda G. Lyon, MSN, MHA, RN, NE-BC, Director of Emergency Services, Gwinnett Medical Center, Lawrenceville, GA Anne P. Manton, PhD, APRN, PMHNP-BC, FAEN, FAAN, Psychiatric Mental Health Nurse Practitioner, Cape Cod Hospital, Bourne, MA Laurie Maxwell, MSN, ARNP-BC, NE-BC, CEN, Sr. Specialist Consultant, ED & Patient Throughput, Tenet Healthcare Corporation, Dallas, TX Follow the action on Mark Mayes, MHA, BSN, RN, CEN, Executive Director of Emergency Services, Trauma, and Performance Excellence, UCLA, Los Angeles, CA Joshua D. McCabe, MSN, RN, CEN, Manager, Emergency Department, Sharp Memorial Hospital, San Diego, CA Jayne K. McGrath, MS, RN, CEN, CCRN, CNS-BC, Clinical Nurse Specialist, University of Wisconsin Hospital & Clinics, Madison, WI Richard Mereu, JD, Chief Government Relations Officer, Emergency Nurses Association, Washington DC Elizabeth A. Mizerek, MSN, RN, CEN, CPEN, FN-CSA, Emergency Department Nurse Educator, Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital Hamilton, Hamilton, NJ Dawn Moeller, MHA, BSN, RN, CEN, Clinical Manager for Emergency and Trauma Services, Advocate Good Shepherd Hospital, Barrington, IL Michael D. Moon, MSN, RN, CNS-CC, CEN, FAEN, Instructor, University of the Incarnate Word, San Antonio, TX Rhonda M. Morgan, DNP, RN, CCNS, APN, Associate Professor, King University, Bristol, TN Daniel J. Nadworny, BSN, RN, Clinical Manager, ED, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, MA Douglas S. Nelson, MD, FAAP, FACEP, Medical Director, Primary Children’s Medical Center, Salt Lake City, UT Carol Oldroyd, MSc, BSC (Hons), PGCE, RGN, RNT, Senior Lecturer in Adult Nursing, Coventry University, Coventry, UK Catherine Olson, MSN, RN, Director, Institute for Quality, Safety, and Injury Prevention, Emergency Nurses Association, Des Plaines, IL AnnMarie Papa, DNP, RN, CEN, NE-BC, FAEN, FAAN, Clinical Director, Medical and Emergency Nursing, Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA #ENALC14 39 Amy Pasmann, BSN, RN, Nursing Director Emergency Department and Rapid Treatment Unit, Primary Children’s Hospital, Salt Lake City, UT Andrea C. Perry, MSN, RN, CNL, CEN, Staff Nurse III, Sutter Roseville Medical Center, Roseville, CA Alicia C. Pruitt, DNP, RN, FNP, CEN, CPEN, CWR, Nurse Practitioner, Hospital Physician Partners/Lovelace Women’s Hospital, Albuquerque, NM Linda F. Robinson, BSN, RN, CEN, CFN, Staff Nurse, St. Elizabeth Healthcare, Edgewood, KY Rose O. Sherman, EdD, RN, NEA-BC, FAAN, Professor and Director, Nursing Leadership Institute, Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton, FL Marilyn D. Singleton, BSN, RN, Site Manager, Bethesda Arrow Springs, Lebanon, OH Tomi St. Mars, MSN, RN, CEN, FAEN, Chief, Office of Injury Prevention, Arizona Department of Health Services, Gilbert, AZ Kathy Szumanski, MSN, RN, NE-BC, Director of Education, Emergency Nurses Association, Des Plaines, IL Paula Tanabe, PhD, RN, FAEN, FAAN, Associate Professor, Duke University, Durham, NC Mary Alice Vanhoy, MSN, RN, CEN, CPEN, NREMT-P, Nurse Manager, Shore Emergency Center at Queenstown, Queenstown, MD Jeanne Venella, DNP, MS, RN, CEN, CPEN, Clinical Practice Specialist, Nuvon Inc, Philadelphia, PA Gayle E. Walker-Cillo, MSN/Ed, RN, CEN, CPEN, FAEN, Clinical Specialist, Morristown Medical Center, Morristown, NJ Lisa A. Wolf, PhD, RN, CEN, FAEN, Director, Institute of Emergency Nursing Research, Emergency Nurses Association, Des Plaines, IL Aaron B. Wolff, BSN, RN, CEN, President, Vital Operations Consulting, Redding, CA Michelle Ziemba, MSN, RN, Director of Trauma and Emergency Services, The University of Arizona Medical Center - University Campus, Tucson, ENA AZ Leadership Conference 2014 Notes ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 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____________________________________________________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Non-educational content will follow this section. Follow the action on #ENALC14 43 ENA Leadership Conference 2014 Exhibit Hall Hours and Floor Plan North Building - 300 Level Exhibition Hall D-E 600 500400300 200 100 Food & Beverage Exhibit Hall Hours: Thursday, March 6 Reception with Exhibitors 6 – 8 pm Friday, March 7 9:30am – 1:30pm ¡¡ Refreshments with the Exhibitors 9:30 – 10:30 am Saturday, March 8 9:15 am – 1:45 pm ¡¡ Refreshments with the Exhibitors 9:15 – 10:15 am ¡¡ Lunch in the Exhibit Hall 11:30 am – 1 pm Booth 229 ENA Pavilion ¡¡ eLearning Demonstrations ¡¡ Wellness Booth ¡¡ Academy of Emergency Nursing (AEN) Information ¡¡ Lunch in the Exhibit Hall 11:30 am – 1 pm ENA Leadership Conference 2014 44 Follow the action on #ENALC14 Exhibitor Listing and Product Description A 510 Advanced Circulatory 1905 County Road C West Roseville, Minnesota 55113 Phone: 651-403-5600 www.advancedcirculatory.com [email protected] Advanced Circulatory’s intrathoracic pressure regulation therapy non-invasively enhances circulation by regulating airflow into the chest. Studies have shown that the ResQPOD ITD can improve survival by 25% or more compared to conventional CPR, and the ResQGARD ITD can safely increase blood pressure by up to 30% in spontaneously breathing patients. 611 Allscripts 222 Merchandise Mart, Suite 2024 Chicago, Illinois 60654 Phone: 1-800-654-0889 www.allscripts.com www.allscripts.com/contact Allscripts improves your hospital’s financial performance. Our solution increases patient throughput, helps your hospital qualify for stimulus dollars, improves reimbursements through automatic coding and decreases costly and tragic medical errors by helping clinicians make informed decisions. 400 Apex Innovations 3909 Ambassador Caffery Parkway, Building K Lafayette, Louisiana 70503 Phone: 866-294-4599 x 112 Fax: 425-740-8506 www.apexinnovations.com [email protected] Visit us for amazing graphics, comprehensive, consistent, current online education with Intelligent Interactivity®. Hemispheres® Stroke Competency, imPULSE® 2.0 Chest Pain Competency, Responder® STEMI Recognition and MI Rule® Visions. Simple, yet robust administrative reporting. Get Accredited. Stay Accredited. Get ready to be impressed! Coming soon, Transitions® Heart Failure Competency Series! 212 Armstrong Medical Industries, Inc. 575 Knightsbridge Parkway Lincolnshire, Illinois 60069 Phone: 800-323-4220 Fax: 847-913-0138 www.armstrongmedical.com [email protected] Armstrong Medical is a manufacturer and distributor with a 50 year commitment to bringing the finest medical equipment to the hospital, EMS, and medical education communities. Our catalog includes such fine products as the A-Smart® Premier™ Aluminum Carts, Wireless Auto-Locking Cart, S-SCORT® new-DUET™ Suction Unit, and Broselow® Pediatric Resuscitation System. B 200 Bard Access Systems 605 North 5600 West Salt Lake City, Utah 84116 Phone: 801-522-5000 www.bardaccess.com [email protected] Bard Access Systems, Inc. is an innovator and market leader in vascular access, imaging technologies and catheter care devices. Bard Access Systems creates products that have a positive impact on peoples’ lives. Located in Salt Lake City, Utah, Bard Access Systems has more than 500 employees. 417 Blue Jay Consulting, LLC 200 South Orange Avenue, Suite 2160 Orlando, Florida 32801 Phone: 407-210-6570 Fax: 407-826-1745 www.bluejayconsulting.com [email protected] Blue Jay Consulting, LLC is a team of nationally recognized emergency department leaders who improve processes, provide enhanced interim leadership or develop a combination of the two. We implement solutions with quantifiable results and tackle each project with a hands-on, in-the-trenches approach. We’re dedicated to the quality of emergency care. 437 Board of Certification for Emergency Nursing 55 Shuman Boulevard, Suite 300 Naperville, Illinois 60563 Phone: 877-302-BCEN (2236) Fax: 630-596-8250 www.BCENcertifications.org [email protected] BCEN is the organization responsible for certifying more than 34,000 emergency, flight and critical care ground transport nurses worldwide. Since January 2009, BCEN, in partnership with PNCB, offers the Certified Pediatric Emergency Nurse (CPEN®) certification. Stop by the booth to obtain information regarding the CEN®, CFRN®, CTRN® and CPEN® certifications. Follow the action on #ENALC14 45 ENA Leadership Conference 2014 ENA 3-14_Layout 1 12/19/13 2:33 PM Page 1 Less Running, More Patient Time A - S M A R T® C A Broselow ColorCode™ Cart R T S WIRELESS Auto-Locking Cart with optional Proximity Reader and Controlled Substance Drawer VISIT US AT ENA LEADERSHIP #212 Breakaway Emergency Cart Armstrong Medical A-SMART® Carts offer unmatched versatility and feature multiple locking options (Wireless Auto-Locking, Wireless Auto-Locking with optional Proximity Reader, Auto-Locking, Auto-Locking with optional Proximity Reader, Push-Button, Key Locking, Breakaway Locking), many cart and drawer sizes, and hundreds of optional accessories. Plus, all A-SMART® Carts are manufactured to ISO 9001:2008 certified standards, and all full-size A-SMART® Carts come with double side-wall construction, stabilizing frame with bumper, soft-grip handles, swivel casters (two locking, one tracking), and ball bearing drawer slides as standard features. A-SMART®. ©2014 Armstrong Medical Ind.,Inc. The DUET™ is a completely self-contained suction unit with AC power supply, battery back-up, and internal charger. It meets the American Heart Association recommendations for suction airflow of >30 LPM at the tip of the suction catheter, and the reduced maximum vacuum recommendations for infant or child suctioning of 80-120 mmHg. Armstrong Medical 800/323-4220 • 847/913-0101 FAX: 847/913-0138 www.armstrongmedical.com [email protected] Exhibitor Listing and Product Description 312 BSN Medical, Inc. 5825 Carnegie Boulevard Charlotte, North Carolina 28209 Phone: 800-552-1157 www.bsnmedical.com [email protected] BSN Medical, world leading cost effective products include Splash MedicalSplashCap™, EyeCap™, AbscessCap™, ORTHO-GLASS® and ORTHO-GLASS® Comfort Splinting, Coverlet® fabric dressings, Cutimed® Sorbact® bacteria binding dressings and more. Ask us how you can Splash, Dress, Splint and Sling with BSN Medical while lowering costs, improving outcomes and maximizing revenue. Hands-on Training. C 524 Calmoseptine, Inc. 16602 Burke Lane Huntington Beach, California 92647 Phone: 714-840-3405 Fax: 714-840-9810 www.calmoseptine.com [email protected] Calmoseptine® Ointment protects and helps heal skin irritations from moisture such as urinary and fecal incontinence. It is also effective for irritations from perspiration, wound drainage, fecal & vaginal fistulas and feeding tube site leakage. Calmoseptine® temporarily relieves discomfort and itching. Free samples at our booth! 241 CEP America 2100 Powell Street, Suite 900 Emeryville, California 94608 Phone: 510-350-2600 www.cepamerica.com [email protected] CEP America today is among the largest providers of acute care management and staffing in the nation, with more than 1,800 providers at over 100 facilities, serving more than 4 million patients annually. Our focus on strong leaders, collaboration, integration, and patient experience creates the foundation for effective partnerships with hospitals. Follow the action on 518 Chamberlain College of Nursing 11830 Westline Industrial Drive St. Louis, Missouri 63146 Phone: 855-308-4846 www.chamberlain.edu//enaorg [email protected] Chamberlain College of Nursing offers flexible online degree options that allow registered nurses to advance their degree in a program that fits their lifestyle while they continue to work. Current options include RN to BSN option, Master of Science in Nursing, Doctor of Nursing Practice, and Graduate Certificate programs. 606 CMR 8940 Bluebonnet Boulevard Baton Rouge, Louisiana 70810 Phone: 225-761-3390 Fax: 225-761-3095 WWW.CMRedis.com [email protected] CMR is an Emergency Department Information System developed by and for emergency medicine professionals to best serve the unique needs and challenges of the ED. Our browser-based, best-ofbreed system alleviates pressure points to optimize workflows, boost regulatory compliance and significantly improve revenue. 340 CPI, Inc. 10850 West Park Place, Suite 600 Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53224 Phone: 800.558.8976 Fax: 414-979-7162 www.crisisprevention.com [email protected] CPI trains healthcare professionals to safely manage disruptive and assaultive behavior. To date, more than eight million individuals worldwide have participated in CPI’s Nonviolent Crisis Intervention® training program. CPI also offers on-site training, DVDs, posters and books. #ENALC14 47 D 104 Dale Medical Products, Inc. 7 Cross Street Plainville, Massachusetts 02762 Phone: 508-695-9316 [email protected] 425 Dignity Health 3400 Data Drive Rancho Cordova, California 95670 Phone: 415-438-5500 www.dignityhealth.org/careers [email protected] Dignity Health, one of the nation’s five largest healthcare systems, is a 16-state network of nearly 11,000 physicians, 56,000 employees, and more than 300 care centers, including hospitals, urgent and occupational care, imaging centers, home health, and primary care clinics. For more information, please visit our website at www.dignityhealth.org/careers. 507 Discharge 1-2-3 Callibra, Inc. 150 North Martingale Road, Suite 838 Schaumburg, Illinois 60173 Phone: 847-605-2125 www.discharge123.com [email protected] Discharge 1-2-3™-- Callibra, Inc. creates exceptionally powerful, yet easy to use technologies and superior document libraries for your current EMR, or as a standalone solution. Available for Emergency, Inpatient, and Ambulatory venues, they provide an uncompromising clinical user experience and the highest quality, patient-specific documents and patient education. ENA Leadership Conference 2014 Exhibitor Listing and Product Description 215 Draeger Medical, Inc. 3135 Quarry Road Telford, Pennsylvania 18969 Phone: 215-660-2369 www.draeger.com [email protected] Dräger is a leading international company in the fields of medical and safety technology. Dräger products protect, support and save lives. Founded in 1889 and located in Lübeck, Germany, the company generated revenues of around EUR 2.18 billion in 2010. Dräger is present in 190 countries with 11,000 employees worldwide. E 429 Elsevier, Inc. 245 Peachtree Center Avenue, Suite 1900 Atlanta, Georgia 30303 440 EmCare, Inc. 13737 Noel Road, Suite 1600 Dallas, Texas 75240 Phone: 214-712-2000 Fax: 214-712-2444 www.emcare.com [email protected] EmCare is a leading provider of clinical department outsourcing services for hospitals nationwide. We help clients achieve efficiency, quality of care and outstanding patient experiences. EmCare’s clinicians manage 12M+ patient encounters annually. Service lines include emergency medicine, hospital medicine, acute care surgery, anesthesiology and radiology/teleradiology. 229 ENA Pavilion Visiting the ENA Pavilion is a must for every attendee. Join us as we showcase several new eLearning and educational products, and share new wellness ideas. Come and learn about the NEWLY launched Trauma Nursing Core Course 7th Edition, and the Geriatric Emergency Nursing Education-GENE products, as well as the UPDATED ENPC product. ¡¡ TNCC 7th Edition empowers nurses with the knowledge, critical thinking skills, and hands-on training to provide expert care for trauma patients. ¡¡ GENE, a comprehensive online course helps to improve patient outcomes for older adults. ¡¡ ENPC has some updates, so how you can bring this Pediatric Course to your organization. 511 EPOWERdoc, Inc. 506 South 93rd Street Omaha, Nebraska 68114 Phone: 515-965-8040 Fax: 515-965-8445 www.epowerdoc.com [email protected] EPOWERdoc is a leading supplier of Emergency Department documentation systems. EPOWERdoc’s EMRDoc™ System is setting standards for fast documentation speed and ease of use. EMRDoc™ is a revolutionary electronic patient tracking and documentation system that incorporates the unique EPOWERdoc template formats into an EMR module that is specifically designed for ED clinicians. 522 Evolution Medical Products, Inc. 74 Eastwood Drive Deerfield, Illinois 60015 Phone: 847-945-5392 Fax: 847-940-0401 [email protected] Cord Caddy monitor cord organizer organizes/manages cords, and enhances patient care with faster lead application. Cords stored individually eliminate inefficient untangling. Immediate identification/retrieval of specific cords results in saving valuable nursing time/ reducing breakage. It also helps improve infection control and room appearance. ENA Leadership Conference 2014 48 100 Exergen Corporation 400 Pleasant Street Watertown, Massachusetts 02472 Phone: 617-923-9900 www.exergen.com [email protected] The Exergen Thermometer provides your patients: ¡¡ Patient friendly true body temperature... core temps! ¡¡ Cost savings of 90% over other thermometry methods. ¡¡ Lifetime warranty - unique to thermometry! ¡¡ Chemical resistant materials that stand up to harsh disinfectants. ¡¡ Educational videos for inservicing and over 50 published studies supporting accuracy. F 101 First Choice Emergency Room 2941 Lake Vista, Suite 200 Lewisville, Texas 75022 Phone: 972-899-6743 www.fcer.com [email protected] First Choice Emergency Room (FCER. com) is the nation’s leading freestanding emergency room system; it is both the largest and the oldest. First Choice Emergency Room facilities are innovative, freestanding, and fully equipped emergency rooms with state of the art diagnostic technology (CT Scanners, Ultrasound, and Digital X-ray) and onsite labs. According to patient feedback collected by Press Ganey. 305 FreemanWhite, Inc. 8845 Red Oak Boulevard Charlotte, North Carolina 28217 Phone: 704-523-2230 Fax: 704-523-2235 www.freemanwhite.com [email protected] With experience on 280+ EDs, FreemanWhite’s ED planning and design expertise is unmatched. We partner with ED clinicians to create efficient, safe, beautiful facilities supported by Lean operations. Our process mapping, computer simulation, scenario planning, budgeting, and decision dashboard tools are unique to the industry and help clients prioritize investments. Follow the action on #ENALC14 Exhibitor Listing and Product Description G 323 GE Healthcare 8200 W. Tower Avenue Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53223 www.gehealthcare.com [email protected] GE is making a new commitment to health. Healthymagination will change the way we approach healthcare, with more than 100 innovations all focused on addressing three critical needs: lowering costs, touching more lives and improving quality. For more information, visit: www.gehealthcare.com 230 Gebauer Company 4444 East 153rd Street Cleveland, Ohio 44128 Phone: 800-321-9348 Fax: 216-581-4970 www.gebauer.com [email protected] For more than 25 years, Grand Canyon University’s College of Nursing and Health Care Professions has been providing outstanding healthcare education for working nurses, health administrators and allied health providers. See the full spectrum of programs offered online and at our Phoenix campus at gcu.edu/CONHCP. 401 Grifols USA 2410 Lillyvale Avenue Los Angeles, California 90032 Phone: 323-225-2221 www.grifols.com Gebauer Company provides Patient Comfort SolutionsTM. Gebauer’s Pain Ease® topical anesthetic skin refrigerant works in seconds to temporarily reduce the pain associated with needle and minor surgical procedures, including IV starts, and incision and drainage of small abscesses. Rx Only 201 General Devices 1000 River Street Ridgefield, New Jersey 07657 Phone: 201-313-7075 Fax: 201-313-5671 www.general-devices.com [email protected] Grifols is a global healthcare company whose mission is to improve the health and well-being of people around the world. We have three primary divisions – Bioscience, Diagnostic and Hospital – that develop, produce and market our innovative products and services to medical professionals in more than 100 countries around the world. H General Devices is the leader in providing products and solutions for connecting EMS prehospital care providers with Emergency medicine in the hospital and beyond: communications, information management, documentation, telemedicine and more. The new CAREpoint Workstation manages all EMS activity for the ED - phone, radio, 12-Leads, recording, forms, email, fax, notify medical teams and much more. Follow the action on 528 Grand Canyon University 3300 West Camelback Road Phoenix, Arizona 85017 Phone: 866-446-7944 Fax: 602-589-2631 gcu.edu/CONHCP [email protected] 208 Horizon Health Behavioral Health Services 2941 Lake Vista Drive Lewisville, Texas 75067 Phone: 1-800-727-2407 Fax: 972-420-8383 http://www.horizonhealth.com/ [email protected] Founded in 1981, Horizon Health Behavioral Health Services is the leading manager and provider of hospital-based behavioral health programs. We have provided services in 47 states, working with hospitals of all types and sizes to manage their behavioral health programs, helping to ease the strain on their emergency departments. #ENALC14 49 238 Humane Restraint Co., Inc. 912 Bethel Circle Waunakee, Wisconsin 53597 Fax: 608-849-6315 www.humanerestraint.com [email protected] Humane Restraint has been manufacturing a variety of ambulatory, stationary and transport restraint devices for more than 137 years, as well as other protective devices for your secure environment. Hundreds of facilities have found our products to be valuable safety assets. I 342 Innovative Trauma Care - ITC 3463 Magic Drive, Suite 120 San Antonio, Texas 78229 Phone: 210-582-5850 Fax: 210-582-5851 itraumacare.com [email protected] The ITClampTM Hemorrhage Control System by Innovative Trauma Care is a clamping device that controls critical bleeding in seconds. Based in Edmonton, Canada with a US headquarters in San Antonio, Texas, ITC provides point of injury solutions to treat common causes of preventable death in traumatic injury scenarios. 525 Inovonics 397 South Taylor Avenue Louisville, Colorado 80027 Phone: 800-782-2709 Fax: 303-939-8977 www.inovonics.com [email protected] Radius is an enterprise mobile duress system featuring the unique ability to locate alarms activated from a panic button pendant, provide notification of the alarm and direct responders to the duress event. ENA Leadership Conference 2014 Exhibitor Listing and Product Description 610 InSight Telepsychiatry, LLC 765 East Route 70, Building A-100 Marlton, New Jersey 08053 Phone: 856-797-4772 Fax: 856-797-4822 www.in-sight.net [email protected] InSight is a national telepsychiatry service provider company with a mission to increase access to behavioral healthcare. InSight specializes in crisis telepsychiatry and can provide on-demand psychiatric evaluations and care within an hour of a request. InSight also provides routine telepsychiatry services to a wide range of settings. J 217 L M 120 NEW EXHIBITOR Life Recovery Systems LRS P.O. Box 151 Napa, California 94559 Phone: 707-226-9300 www.life-recovery.com [email protected] THE LRS THERMOSUIT SYSTEM ¡¡ 100% non-invasive - cools the entire body ¡¡ Fastest reported patient cooling times; cools to 34oC in 30 - 40 minutes ¡¡ Reduced complications ¡¡ Ease of use for hospital staff ¡¡ Nurse or technician operated ¡¡ Convenient patient access ¡¡ Short in-device time ¡¡ Compelling hospital ROI NEW EXHIBITOR Jacobs and Associates, LLC 655 Highway 171 Stonewall, Louisiana 70178 Phone: 318-775-5096 Fax: 318-775-5418 www.errecruiters.net [email protected] Executive Search Firm: Specializing in ER & Critical Care recruitment; manager level and above. K 604 NEW EXHIBITOR Kwalu, LLC 6160 Peachtree - Dunwood Road, Building C Atlanta, Georgia 30328 Phone: 678-690-5600 kwalu.com [email protected] Mason Tayler Medical sells the Veinlite Transilluminator for locating hard to access veins. Our own product line includes Infu-Stat Pressure Infuser Bags and Evacu-Stat Gastric Lavage Kits and Tubs. 224 McKesson 5995 Windward Parkway, ATHQ-2801 Alpharetta, Georgia 30005 Phone: 404-338-6000 www.mckesson.com [email protected] ED Benchmarks and Intelligent Coding 531 Linde Therapeutic Solutions 6600 Peachtree Dunwoody Road, Embassy Row 400, Suite 300 Atlanta, Georgia 30328 Phone: 1-877-733-2721 Fax: 888-472-0935 www.Linde.com [email protected] 204 MEDHOST, Inc. 6100 West Plano Parkway, Suite 3100 Plano, Texas 75093 The Linde Group is a global supplier of medical gases, healthcare equipment, and therapies. Our research advances in development of gas-enabled therapies to improve standards in patient care. We are dedicated to patient-focused solutions and committed to the highest quality products, technologies, services, and training. Linde Therapeutic Solutions is a business unit of Linde Gas North America LLC. Premium Health Care Furniture 423 Mason Tayler Medical 1083 Delaware Avenue Buffalo, New York 14209 Phone: 716-883-8097 Fax: 716-883-8099 masontayler.com [email protected] 512 Modular Services Company 500 East Britton Road Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73114 Phone: 800-687-0938 Fax: 405-528-0368 www.modularservices.com [email protected] Modular Services Company is a medical products design company that creates, manufactures and services unique prefabricated products- Medical Headwalls, Fixed/Movable Columns, Movable Boom Systems and more. We unite clinical function with innovative design to generate product solutions that increase productivity and ultimately, help nurses provide care with greater ease and efficiency. 222 MorTan, Inc. The Morgan Lens 329 East Pine Street Missoula, Montana 59807 ENA Leadership Conference 2014 50 Follow the action on #ENALC14 Exhibitor Listing and Product Description Better outcomes demand exceptional CPR Respond with TrueCPR from Physio-Control TrueCPR helps your team optimize their manual CPR performance with the real-time feedback they need on the most critical resuscitation parameters. Stop by booth #405 to learn more. physio-control.com/TrueCPR ©2014 Physio-Control, Inc. Redmond, WA. GDR 3317715_A N O 226 Nurses Service Organization - NSO (Aon Affinity) 159 East County Line Road Hatboro, Pennsylvania 19040 Phone: 1-800-247-1500 Fax: 800-739-8818 www.nso.com [email protected] For more than 35 years, Nurses Service Organization (NSO) has been protecting nursing professionals from medical malpractice lawsuits and state BON inquiries. Over 650,000 nurses safeguard their careers with Nurses’ professional liability insurance through NSO, making us the nation’s largest provider of medical malpractice coverage for nurses. www.nso.com Follow the action on 529 Ossur Americas 27051 Towne Centre Drive Foothill Ranch, California 92610 Phone: 800-233-6263 www.ossur.com [email protected] Össur, a leader in Injury Solutions, offering industry proven brands like the Miami J®, Resolve® Halo, Occian™ Back, Miami Lumbar® LSO, & TLSO and innovative products like the Miami J® Advanced, to help provide successful outcomes for you and your patients. P 516 PerSys Medical 5310 Elm Street Houston, Texas 77081 Phone: 1-888-737-7978 Fax: 713-723-6221 www.ps-med.com [email protected] PerSys Medical is a global entity specializing in business development, marketing and sales of innovative medical technologies. Core markets include EMS, Hospital, Military, Search & Rescue and Law Enforcement/Tactical. Our products encompass Intraosseous Access, Resuscitation including Airway & Breathing Management, Wound & Hemorrhage Control, Thermal Protection/Hypothermia Care, and more. 523 PEPID, LLC 4620 North 16th Street, Suite C-217 Phoenix, Arizona 85016 #ENALC14 51 ENA Leadership Conference 2014 Exhibitor Listing and Product Description 405 Leadership Conference Supporter Physio-Control, Inc. 11811 Willows Road NE Redmond, Washington 98052 Phone: 800-442-1142 www.physio-control.com [email protected] LIFEPAK® defibrillator/monitors and automated external defibrillators from Physio-Control set the standard for quality and reliability and are used by more physicians, hospitals and emergency medical services than any other brand. Physio-Control continues to lead the industry through innovation and advanced technology. For more information, visit our website at www.physio-control.com. 123 Optum Clinical Solutions 100 Quannapowitt Parkway, Suite 405 Wakefield, Massachusetts 01880 Phone: 781-557-3000 Fax: 781-557-3140 www.optum.com [email protected] Optum ED PulseCheck® is the highperformance ED EMR that helps hospitals improve quality of care measures in the ED. ED PulseCheck offers charge capture and full clinical documentation functionality, helping clinicians better manage ED workflow, drive clinical quality, improve financial performance, and provides information to the clinician to help facilitate quality of patient care. 108 Pinpoint, Inc. 2100 Southbridge Parkway, Suite 650 Birmingham, Alabama 35209 Phone: 205-414-7541 Fax: 205-414-7400 www.pinpointinc.com [email protected] Since 1992, Pinpoint’s INSTANTalarm 5000 has been relied upon by thousands of nurses to keep them safe at work. Continuously renewed and updated, it is now probably the most widely installed duress alarm system in the world. It’s simple to use, extremely reliable and has no central computer to go wrong. Booth #108. S 216 Scale-Tronix, Inc. 200 East Post Road White Plains, New York 10601 Phone: 800-873-2001 Fax: 914-948-0581 www.scale-tronix.com [email protected] Scale-Tronix manufactures a complete line of scales for all weighing needs. The weighing platforms are extremely low profile for easy patient access and the weighing process is fully automatic. Weight is displayed in pounds or kilos on easy-to-read LED digital readouts. Cordless or line cord powered, these scales have capacities up to 1000 lbs. All Scales shipped EMR ready. 402 PreventaMed Technologies, Inc. N17 W24222 Riverwood Drive, Suite 190 Waukesha, Wisconsin 53188 R 311 Relaxation Station Attendees can connect and recharge at the Relaxation Station, located inside the exhibit hall at Booth #311. Professional massage therapists provide an upper body massage on a special chair and relax the tension areas of the neck, back, shoulders and arms. These massages help attendees feel more welcome, appreciated, refreshed, alert and energized. Foot massage stations are also available. Sponsored by: 113 Society of Cardiovascular Patient Care 6161 Riverside Drive Dublin, Ohio 43017 Phone: 614-442-5950 Fax: 614-442-5953 www.scpcp.org [email protected] The Society of Cardiovascular Patient Care (SCPC) is a process improvement based nonprofit organization dedicated to helping facilities develop efficient methods of caring for acute coronary syndrome, heart failure, and a-fib patients. SCPC offers educational opportunities and patient-centered accreditation programs based on best practices and protocols resulting in better outcomes. 213 RetroFit Medical LLC 10 Candle Lane East Brunswick, New Jersey 08816 Phone: 800-288-1950 Fax: 732-238-2330 Retrofitmedical.com [email protected] Gynocart will convert any ER stretcher into a GYN exam table so the patient doesn’t have to wait for the GYN exam room to be available. She will be cycled through the ER much faster as the wait time for this examination is reduced. ENA Leadership Conference 2014 52 Follow the action on #ENALC14 AGGRESSIVE BEHAVIOR... ...towards staff at work is dramatically on the increase, especially in our Hospitals. Verbal abuse, threats with weapons, cuts, punches, even serious injuries are becoming everyday occurrences. The impact on the confidence and morale of staff is damaging and costly and has a serious impact on the caring and commitment that lies at the heart of the staff/patient relationship. Installing an INSTANTalarm®5000 Staff Personal Alarm System will make a dramatic difference ® INSTANTalarm does NOT • track you around the hospital • use radio-frequency • rely on unreliable wi-fi • have a computer controlling it INSTANTalarm,® however, DOES • let you decide when you need help • pinpoint your location, to a room • work instantaneously • make you and your patients feel safer • reduce the frequency and impact of violent incidents Which is why, over 20 years, INSTANTalarm® 5000 has been probably the most widely-installed, staff duress alarm system in the world. ® 205.414.7541 www.pinpointinc.com Exhibitor Listing and Product Description 461 Spacelabs Healthcare 35301 SE Center Street Snoqualmie, Washington 98065 Phone: 425-396-3300 www.spacelabshealthcare.com [email protected] Spacelabs inspires the world to bring the best care experience to patients and families. Our portfolio of patient monitoring, clinical tools and connectivity solutions support clinical decisionmaking, helping you focus on patient care regardless of location. Come see our new, innovative solutions that will change your perspective of patient monitoring. 513 SSCOR, Inc. 11064 Randall Street Sun Valley, California 91352 Phone: 818-504-4054 www.SSCOR.com [email protected] SSCOR is a manufacturer of medical devices designed to aid the healthcare professional in clearing the patient airway. In fact, clearing the airway is our #1 priority! 205 Strategic Sponsor Stryker Medical 3800 East Centre Avenue Portage, Michigan 49002 Phone: 269-329-2100 www.stryker.com/prime [email protected] Stryker Medical offers patient handling equipment for the acute care hospital market. Stryker’s innovative products include hospital beds, stretchers, transport chairs, temperature management solutions, furniture and products for the emergency medical services industry. Stryker equipment is designed to help simplify healthcare delivery through safety and efficiency. T 600 Tangent Medical 8170 Jackson Road, Suite A Ann Arbor, Michigan 48103 Phone: 866-694-4040 Fax: 734-253-2043 www.TangentMedical.com [email protected] Designed through extensive clinical research on the needs of both healthcare workers & patients, the NovaCath™ Integrated IV Catheter System is the only closed system PIVC to cost-effectively combine advanced catheter stabilization, passive needle encapsulation & next generation tubing management on every single start, setting new standards in IV catheter design, functionality and performance. 112 NEW EXHIBITOR Leadership Conference Supporter Teva Select Brands 41 Moores Road Frazer, Pennsylvania 19355 Phone: 800-545-8800 www.tevapharm.com At Teva, we’re passionate about improving quality of life and healthcare globally. This is our ongoing mission as we touch the lives of millions of patients every day, and billions of patients every year. Visit our website to learn more www.tevapharm.com. 530 The Gideons International P.O. Box 140800 Nashville, Tennessee 37214 Phone: 615-564-5000 www.gideons.org [email protected] The Gideons International distributes white New Testaments with Psalms and Proverbs to all medical personnel at no charge in appreciation for what they do in our community. 532 The Sullivan Group 1 South 450 Summit Avenue, Suite 320 Oakbrook Terrace, Illinois 60181 ENA Leadership Conference 2014 500 Thoracic Aortic Disease (TAD) Coalition 22 Manhasset Avenue Port Washington, New York 11050 54 505 TransMotion Medical, Inc. 1441 Wolf Creek Trail Sharon Center, Ohio 44274 Phone: 330-239-4192 Fax: 330-590-8111 www.transmotionmedical.com [email protected] TransMotion Medical, Inc. Stretcher-Chairs require a reduction/elimination of patient transfers, thus reducing staff and patient fall risk and improving throughput. This elite line of Mobile, Motorized Stretcher-Chairs is manufactured in the USA and features Power Drive and Power Positioning. Call for a free demonstration, 1-866-860-8447 or visit www.transmotionmedical.com. 615 VedellsMD, LLC 10900 King Bay Drive Boca Raton, Florida 33498 Phone: 561-883-92688 Fax: 561-883-9268 www.VedellsMD.com [email protected] Easy to read reference guides. They can be used in conjunction with familiar systems or stand alone. The charts are unique because while familiar systems end at age 10 the charts incorporate information for treating a 12 year-old through adult. Categories are color-coded according to the patient’s age (neonate-adult) and weight (kg-lbs.)..critical emergency medications, pre calculated dosages. 341 Vernacare Inc. 150 Norfinch Drive, Unit 4 Toronto, Ontario M3N 1X6 Canada Phone: 1-800-268-2422 Fax: 416-661-5559 www.vernacare.com [email protected] Vernacare is a leading infection control organization, whose innovative single-use system and award winning products have made us global leaders in human waste management across the healthcare sector. Follow the action on #ENALC14 Exhibitor Listing and Product Description 411 Strategic Sponsor Vidacare Corporation, Recently Aquired by Teleflex 4350 Lockhill Selma Road, Suite 150 San Antonio, Texas 78249 114 VisiCare by Insignia Marketing, Inc. 8111 Ashlane Way, Suite 206 The Woodlands, Texas 77382 W 536 NEW EXHIBITOR Walden University 650 South Exeter Street Baltimore, Maryland 21202 Phone: 909-213-8284 www.waldenu.edu [email protected] 236 Wellsoft Corporation 27 World’s Fair Drive Somerset, New Jersey 08873 Phone: 800-597-9909 Fax: 732-507-7199 www.wellsoft.com [email protected] Consistently ranked #1 Emergency Department Information System (EDIS) by KLAS, Wellsoft EDIS offers an exceptional combination of experience, extensive workflow analysis and award winning customer support. Wellsoft EDIS is certified for meaningful use. Software features include Patient Tracking, Clinical Documentation, CPOE/Results, Charge Capture, Risk Management, CCD integration and more. Z 221 ZOLL Medical Corporation 269 Mill Road Chelmsford, Massachusetts 01824 Fax: 978-421-0049 www.zoll.com [email protected] ZOLL Medical Corporation, a leader in medical devices and software solutions, helps hospital professionals manage, treat and save lives while also increasing operational efficiency. ZOLL offers innovative, hospital-specific products for defibrillation, circulation, pacing, temperature management, fluid resuscitation and information management that strengthen the Chain of Survival and improve outcome. The College of Health Sciences is home to Walden’s School of Health Sciences and School of Nursing. Academic programs include bachelor’s, master’s, and doctoral degree programs in areas such as nursing, public health, and health services. Students learn the skills they need to take on greater responsibility as nurse leaders, health policymakers, and public health advocates. Thank you to our 2014 Strategic Sponsors Leadership Conference Supporters ENA Leadership Conference 2014 56 Follow the action on #ENALC14 Exhibitor Listing by Product Categories Airway Management / Accessories 510 ���Advanced Circulatory 513���SSCOR, Inc. Ambulatory Assist Devices 505���TransMotion Medical, Inc. Architectural 215���Draeger Medical, Inc. 305���FreemanWhite, Inc. Defibrilators 405 ��� Physio-Control, Inc. 221���ZOLL Medical Corporation Furnishings 604���Kwalu, LLC 205���Stryker Disposable Medical Devices 104���Dale Medical Products, Inc. 120���Life Recovery Systems – LRS 600���Tangent Medical Hospital 425���Dignity Health Duress Alarm System 108���Pinpoint, Inc. Associations and Organizations 437���Board of Certification for Emergency Nursing 530���The Gideons International Bandages / Dressings 312���BSN Medical, Inc. 104���Dale Medical Products, Inc. 516���PerSys Medical Bleeding Control Device 342���Innovative Trauma Care – ITC Capnography / Capnometry / CO2 Monitoring 416���Spacelabs Healthcare Carts 212���Armstrong Medical Industries, Inc. 512���Modular Services Company Catheters 200���Bard Access Systems Chart / Charting Accessories 236���Wellsoft Corporation Consulting and Contracted Services 417���Blue Jay Consulting 241���CEP America 305���FreemanWhite, Inc. 208���Horizon Health Behavioral Health Services 123���Optum Clinical Solutions 236���Wellsoft Corporation ED Computerization 611���Allscripts 606���CMR 507���Discharge 1-2-3- Callibra, Inc. 511���EPOWERdoc, Inc. 201���General Devices 224���McKesson 123��� Optum Clinical Solutions 236���Wellsoft Corporation Educational Providers 518��� Chamberlain College of Nursing 340���CPI, Inc. 507���Discharge 1-2-3- Callibra, Inc. 113���Society of Cardiovascular Patient Care 536���Walden University Educational Resources 400���Apex Innovations 312���BSN Medical, Inc. 518���Chamberlain College of Nursing 340���CPI, Inc. 528���Grand Canyon University 536���Walden University Educational Simulators 212���Armstrong Medical Industries, Inc. Environmentally Safe Disposable Equipment 341���Vernacare Inc. Infection Control Equipment 200���Bard Access Systems 522��� Evolution Medical Products, Inc. Insurance 226���Nurses Service Organization – NSO (Aon Affinity) Intravascular Temperature Management 221���ZOLL Medical Corporation IV Infusion Equipment 600���Tangent Medical 221���ZOLL Medical Corporation Medical Headwalls 512���Modular Services Company Needles / Syringes / Injection Device 516���PerSys Medical 600���Tangent Medical Nitrous Oxide Pain Management Delivery System 531���Linde Therapeutic Solutions Orthopedic 529���Ossur Americas Pain Management 230���Gebauer Company 531���Linde Therapeutic Solutions Panic Button / Mobile Duress System 525���Inovonics Equipment Organizers 522���Evolution Medical Products, Inc. 512���Modular Services Company Exam Tables 213���RetroFit Medical LLC Follow the action on #ENALC14 57 ENA Leadership Conference 2014 Exhibitor Listing by Product Categories Patient Monitoring Systems and Accessories 522���Evolution Medical Products, Inc. 100���Exergen Corporation 323���GE Healthcare 201���General Devices 405���Physio-Control, Inc. 416���Spacelabs Healthcare PCs PDAs Hardware 611���Allscripts 201���General Devices Pulse Oximeters 405���Physio-Control, Inc. Recruitment / Staffing 425���Dignity Health 440���EmCare, Inc. 101���First Choice Emergency Room 217���Jacobs and Associates, LLC Restraints 238���Humane Restraint Co., Inc. Resuscitation and Shock Therapy 510 ���Advanced Circulatory Pharmaceuticals / Supplies 230���Gebauer Company 401���Grifols USA 531���Linde Therapeutic Solutions 112���Teva Select Brands Scales 216���Scale-Tronix, Inc. Portable Suction 212���Armstrong Medical Industries, Inc. Software 611���Allscripts 606���CMR 507���Discharge 1-2-3- Callibra, Inc. 224���McKesson 123���Optum Clinical Solutions Procedural Chairs 205���Stryker ENA Leadership Conference 2014 Telepsychiatry Services 610��� InSight Telepsychiatry, LLC Training 340��� CPI, Inc. Transport (Air / Ground) 505��� TransMotion Medical, Inc. Resuscitation 615���VedellsMD, LLC Personal Protection Equipment / Apparel 108���Pinpoint, Inc. Pressure Infusers 423���Mason Tayler Medical Stretchers 205��� Stryker 505��� TransMotion Medical, Inc. Topical Anesthetic 230��� Gebauer Company Tube Holders 516��� PerSys Medical Ultrasound 200��� Bard Access Systems Soft Goods 312���BSN Medical, Inc. 104���Dale Medical Products, Inc. Vital Sign Monitors 323��� GE Healthcare 416��� Spacelabs Healthcare Wound / Skin Care Products 524��� Calmoseptine, Inc. Splints / Supports / Immobilizers 529���Ossur Americas 58 Follow the action on #ENALC14 Advamed Code of Ethics and Exhibitors AdvaMed Code of Ethics (Effective July 1, 2009) The Advanced Medical Technology Association (AdvaMed) represents companies that develop, produce, manufacture, and market medical products, technologies and related services and therapies used to diagnose, treat, monitor, manage and alleviate health conditions and disabilities in order to enable patients to live longer and healthier lives. AdvaMed recognizes the obligation to facilitate ethical interactions between Companies and Healthcare Professionals. According to the AdvaMed Code of Ethics a Company occasionally may provide items to Healthcare Professionals that benefit patients or serve a genuine educational function for Healthcare Professionals. Other than medical textbooks or anatomical models used for educational purposes, any such item should have a fair market value of less than $100. A Company may not provide items that are capable of use by Healthcare Professionals for noneducational or non-patient-related purposes. Note: AdvaMed Code is voluntary and for more information go to: www.advamed.org AdvaMed Code of Ethics Compliant ENA Exhibitors Booth #Exhibitor 510_______ Advanced Circulatory 200_______ Bard Access Systems 312_______ BSN Medical, Inc. 215_______ Draeger Medical, Inc. 522_______ Evolution Medical Products, Inc. 238_______ Humane Restraint Co., Inc. 342_______ Innovative Trauma Care – ITC 531_______ Linde Therapeutic Solutions 529_______ Ossur Americas 405_______ Physio-Control, Inc. 205_______ Stryker Medical 600_______ Tangent Medical 221_______ ZOLL Medical Corporation Pharma Code of Ethics and Exhibitors PhRMA Code of Ethics (Effective January 2009) The Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of American (PhRMA) represents research-based pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies. Our members develop and market new medicines to enable patients to live longer and healthier lives. Ethical relationships with healthcare professionals are critical to our mission of helping patients by developing and marketing new medicines. This Code is to reinforce our intention that our interactions with healthcare professionals are professional exchanges designed to benefit patients and to enhance the practice of medicine. It is appropriate for companies, where permitted by law, to offer items designed primarily for the education of patients or healthcare professionals if the items are not of substantial value ($100 or less) and do not have value to healthcare professionals outside of his or her professional responsibilities. Items designed primarily for the education of patients or healthcare professionals should not be offered on more than an occasional basis, even if each individual item is appropriate. Note: PhRMA Code is voluntary and for more information go to: www.pharma.org PhRMA Code of Ethics Compliant ENA Exhibitors Booth # Exhibitor 510_______ Advanced Circulatory 312_______ BSN Medical, Inc. 215_______ Draeger Medical, Inc. 522_______ Evolution Medical Products, Inc. 401_______ Grifols USA 342_______ Innovative Trauma Care – ITC 531_______ Linde Therapeutic Solutions 405_______ Physio-Control, Inc. 600_______ Tangent Medical 112_______ Teva Select Brands Follow the action on #ENALC14 59 ENA Leadership Conference 2014 Advertising Index Dignity Health_________________________________________________ Inside Front Cover Armstrong Medical__________________________________________________________ 46 Physio-Control______________________________________________________________ 51 Pinpoint, Inc._______________________________________________________________ 53 Stryker_____________________________________________________________________ 55 Bard________________________________________________________________ Back Cover ENA Leadership Conference 2014 60 Follow the action on #ENALC14 Comprehensive Online Course to Help Improve Patient Outcomes for Older Adults The New Geriatric Course Provides the Tools to: § Assess special needs of older adults § Implement best geriatric practices § Coordinate care for better patient outcomes Purchase Today! Group Pricing Available www.ena.org/gene Come See GENE at the ENA Pavillion! Located in the Exhibit Hall § 17 Interactive Modules § Up to 15.21 Credit Hours § Geriatric Evidence-based Research The Emergency Nurses Association is accredited as a provider of continuing nursing education by the American Nurses Credentialing Center’s Commission on Accreditation. ULTRASOUND FOR IV GUIDANCE INCREASE IV PLACEMENT SUCCESS RATES OVER BLIND STICKS. “The nurse should consider using visualization technologies that aid in vein identification and selection.”1 SITE-RITE PREVUE* ULTRASOUND SYSTEM & PINPOINT* GEL CAP WITH NEEDLE GUIDE 1 INS, Standards of Practice Indications for use: The Site-Rite Prevue*Ultrasound System is intended to provide ultrasound imaging of the human body. Specific clinical applications include: Adult Cephalic, Neonatal Cephalic, Pediatric, and Peripheral Vessel. Indications for use: The gel cap is intended for use as an ultrasound coupling medium for use with the Site-Rite Prevue* Ultrasound System. The device is intended for use with pediatrics and adults. Indications for use: The needle guides are intended to provide guidance for a needle to intersect an ultrasound beam at a fixed distance below the skin to assist the medical practioner in placing the tip of a needle in a specific structure. This device is intended for use with pediatrics and adults. Warning: The Pinpoint* Gel Cap contains potassium metabisulfite and carrageenan which may cause allergic reactions in certain patient populations. Patients with known sensitivity to these ingredients should avoid contact with the gel. Please consult package insert for more detailed safety information and instructions for use. *Bard, Pinpoint, and Site-Rite Prevue are trademarks and/or registered trademarks of C. R. Bard, Inc. © 2013 C. R. Bard, Inc. All Rights Reserved. MC-1168-00 1304R WWW.BARDACCESS.COM