Title: Are pre-intubation checklists superfluous? <br/>Author: Brent King<br/><a href='http://umem.org/profiles/faculty/1884/'>[Click to email author]</a><hr/><p>
The Bottom Line: Investigators studying the use of a pre-intubation checklist versus "usual care" found no differences in important outcomes such as oxygen saturation and first pass success. However, the study was conducted as a part of a larger study, was unblinded, and not well controlled. </p>
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The investigators who conducted the multicenter CHECK UP trial, a study of head up intubation in ICU patients, reviewed the care of 262 ICU patients who were intubated. Some intubation attempts were guided by a pre-intubation checklist and some were not. The authors found no difference between the groups in lowest SPO2, number of intubation attempts, etc. However, the study was unblinded and largely observational. In many cases, the elements of a checklist had been incorporated into routine practice. </p>
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Take Home Point: While the authors found no differences in outcomes, this study does little to prove or disprove the value of pre-intubation checklists. Not only was the study essentially uncontrolled, the untoward events being studied are unusual in the hands of experienced clinicians.</p>
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Comment: Pre-procedural checklists make intuitive sence to me. They help us to avoid cultural drift. I am certainly not ready to abandon the use of a pre-intubation checklist based upon this study</p>
<fieldset><legend>References</legend>
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Janz DR, Semler MW, Joffe AM, et al. A multicenter, randomized trial of a checklist for endotracheal intubation of critically ill adults. Chest 2018;153:816-824.</p>
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