ISSN 1672-9234 CN 11-5289/R
Responsible Institution:China Association for Science and Technology
Publishing:Chinese Nursing Journals Publishing House Co.,Ltd.
Sponsor:Chinese Nursing Association
Source journal for Chinese Science Citation Database
China Academic Journals Full-text Database
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Chinese Science and Technical Journal Database

Chinese Journal of Nursing Education ›› 2023, Vol. 20 ›› Issue (2): 223-228.doi: 10.3761/j.issn.1672-9234.2023.02.017

• Clinical Practice • Previous Articles     Next Articles

Evidence summary on management of neonatal umbilical catheterization in the neonatal intensive care unit

LI Xiaowen(),HU Yanling,WAN Xingli,SHI Zeyao   

  • Received:2022-03-20 Online:2023-02-15 Published:2023-02-20
  • Contact: Zeyao SHI E-mail:2430159468@qq.com

Abstract:

Objective To retrieve the evidence for the management of neonatal umbilical catheterization,and to evaluate and summarize the best evidence. Methods According to“6S model”,we systema-tically searched the CNKI,Wanfang,PubMed,Cochrane Library,UpToDate,National Guideline Clearinghouse and other websites regarding all the evidence on the management of neonatal umbilical catheterization in neonatal intensive care unit(NICU). The search time limit was from the inception of the databases till November 1,2021. Two researchers evaluated the quality of the included literature,and extracted evidence from the literature that met the quality standards. Results We searched 12 articles,including 5 guidelines,5 systematic reviews and 2 clinical decisions. Eighteen best evidences were collected from 4 aspects,including relevant technology of umbilical catheterization,catheter device management,catheter removal timing,and prevention of complications. Conclusion This study provides clinical medical staff with evidence-based evidence for the operation and management of umbilical catheterization and promotes the management of the catheterization site. Incidence of catheter-related complications will be reduced accordingly.

Key words: Intensive Care Units, Neonatal, Umbilical Arteries, Umbilical Veins, Evidence-Based Nursing, Best evidence