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Medical Line Management in Critical Care Transportations: A Novel Securement Device

Clin Nurs Res. 2026 Apr 5:10547738261429348. doi: 10.1177/10547738261429348. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

Critically ill patients frequently require intrahospital transport (IHT) to diagnostic exams or procedures and must remain connected to life-sustaining medical lines. During IHT, the risk of tangled medical lines is unavoidable. The idea for a novel medical line securement device was inspired by a patient transport nurse due to frustrations and workflow inefficiencies managing tangled medical lines. The study aim was to explore the correlation between the utilization of a single-use securement device to manual or accidental disconnections of medical lines during IHT, and nurses’ perception of efficiency, compared to the current practice of no utilization of a securement device. In 2019, a randomized, descriptive, correlational study was conducted on 142 progressive and intensive care hospitalized patients. Study coordinators measured the number of times either IV lines or monitor cords were accidentally or manually disconnected to detangle during or after transportation and the perception of transport efficiency. Results revealed fewer manual disconnections among intervention group compared to the control. Nurses’ perception regarding the efficiency between the intervention and control group was statistically significant when the device was utilized to secure the lines and cords during transport. Nurses reported much higher satisfaction rates of transport efficiency when the device was used. This finding showed the device’s utility for improving nurse satisfaction during IHT of critically ill patients. Utilization of the medical line securement device may be generalizable across other healthcare settings and disciplines where the complexity of medical lines may exist.

PMID:41936022 | DOI:10.1177/10547738261429348

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