Healthcare organisations have an obligation to provide a high-quality resuscitation service, and to ensure that staff are trained and updated regularly to a level of proficiency appropriate to each individual’s expected role.
As part of the quality standards for cardiopulmonary resuscitation practice and training this document provides lists of the minimum equipment and drugs required for cardiopulmonary resuscitation in settings that deliver community hospitals care. These lists are categorised according to the clinical setting.
The equipment and drug lists on this page are in reference to the Community Hospitals Care Quality Standards.
The core standards for the provision of cardiopulmonary resuscitation across all healthcare settings are described in the Introduction and Overview to Quality Standards.
Drug tables for cardiac arrest are highlighted in the text with the symbol !
- All clinical service providers must ensure that their staff have immediate access to appropriate resuscitation equipment and drugs to facilitate rapid resuscitation of the patient in cardiorespiratory arrest. The standard defibrillator sign should be used in order to reduce delay in locating a defibrillator in an emergency.
- All settings must have a means of calling for help (e.g. landline telephone [internal or external], mobile telephone with reliable signal, or alarm bell).
- Standardisation of the equipment used for cardiopulmonary resuscitation (including defibrillators and emergency suctioning equipment), and the layout of equipment and drugs throughout an organisation is recommended.
- It is recognised that planning for every eventuality is complex, therefore, organisations must undertake a risk assessment to determine what resources are required given their local circumstances. Risk factors to consider include patient group (e.g. adults, children), incidence of cardiac arrest, training of staff, and access to expert help.
- a) Community hospitals may need special provisions (e.g. for failed intubation, tracheostomy care, cardiac arrest in pregnancy etc.).
- b) Some settings need a wide range of equipment immediately available (e.g. resuscitation room in emergency department). Suggested options include having basic equipment (and possibly drugs) available immediately (on a resuscitation trolley), and further equipment and drugs arriving with a resuscitation team (in a ‘grab-bag’), or in some settings as part of an ambulance response.
- c) Staff should be trained to use the available equipment according to their expected roles.
- Depending on the organisation, this risk assessment must be overseen by a Resuscitation Service Structure or a designated resuscitation lead. Expert advice should also be sought locally from those regularly involved in resuscitation (e.g. resuscitation officers, emergency physicians, cardiac care unit staff, intensivists, anaesthetists, prehospital care physicians).
- Resuscitation equipment should be single-patient-use and latex-free, whenever possible and appropriate. Where non-disposable equipment is used, a clear policy for decontamination after each use must be available and must be followed.
- Personal protective equipment (e.g. gloves, aprons, eye protection) and sharps boxes must be available, based on a local risk assessment and local polices.
- A reliable system of equipment checks and replacement must be in place to ensure that equipment and drugs are always available for use in a cardiac arrest. The frequency of checks should be determined locally.
- It is recommended that equipment and drugs are presented in a clear and logical manner to enable easier use during an emergency.
- The manufacturer’s instructions must be followed regarding use, storage, servicing and expiry of equipment and drugs.
- Further equipment and drugs may be needed to manage other types of emergencies that are likely to be encountered in a particular setting; this may include:
- monitoring equipment (e.g. blood pressure, pulse oximetry, 3-lead electrocardiogram [ECG], temperature, waveform capnography);
- 12-lead ECG recorder;
- near-patient tests (e.g. blood glucose, blood gas analysis).
- A formal procurement process that includes trialling of equipment before purchase is recommended. Trialling of resuscitation equipment can take place in actual care settings or in simulated patient scenarios.
- The precise availability of equipment and drugs should be determined locally. The lists include a suggestion on the immediacy with which equipment and drugs should be available:
- Immediate – available for use within the first minutes of cardiorespiratory arrest (i.e. at the start of the resuscitation).
- Accessible – available for prompt use when the need is determined by the resuscitation team.
- These lists are not exhaustive. Local experts should be consulted to ensure the appropriate equipment and drugs are available when they are needed, to enable provision of high-quality attempted resuscitation.
The equipment and drug lists in this chapter are for adult community hospitals care.
Drug tables for cardiac arrest are highlighted in the text with the symbol !
Community hospitals care: adult
Airway and breathing
Item | Suggested availability | Comments |
---|---|---|
Pocket mask with oxygen port, and oxygen tubing | Immediate | |
Oxygen mask with reservoir | Immediate | |
Self-inflating bag with reservoir | Immediate | |
Clear face masks, sizes 3, 4, 5 | Immediate | For use with self-inflating bag |
Oropharyngeal airways, sizes 2, 3, 4 | Immediate | |
Nasopharyngeal airways, sizes 6, 7 (and lubrication) | Immediate | Will depend on local policy and staff training |
Portable suction (battery or manual) with Yankauer sucker and soft suction catheters | Immediate | Airway suction equipment. NPSA Signal. Reference number 1309. February 2011 |
Supraglottic airway device with syringes, lubrication and ties/tapes/scissors as appropriate | Immediate/Accessible | Choice of device (e.g. laryngeal mask airway, i-gel®, laryngeal tube) and size will depend on local policy and staff training |
Oxygen cylinder (with key where necessary) | Immediate | |
Magill forceps | Immediate | Will depend on local policy and staff training |
Stethoscope | Immediate |
Community hospitals care: adult
Circulation
Item | Suggested availability | Comment |
---|---|---|
Automated external defibrillator (AED) | Immediate | Type of defibrillator and locations determined by a local risk assessment (e.g. manual defibrillators for settings where general anaesthesia undertaken). Available to enable shock within 3 minutes of collapse |
Adhesive defibrillator pads x 2 packs | Immediate | |
Razor | Immediate | |
ECG electrodes | Immediate | If monitoring devices are available |
Tuff Cut Scissors | Immediate | |
Intravenous cannulae (selection of sizes) and 2% chlorhexidine/alcohol wipes, tourniquets and cannula dressings | Immediate/Accessible | Will depend on local policy and staff training |
Adhesive tape | Immediate/Accessible | |
Intravenous infusion set | Accessible | Will depend on local policy and staff training |
0.9% sodium chloride (1000 ml) | Accessible | Amount depends on access to further fluids |
Selection of needles and syringes | Accessible | Will depend on local policy and staff training |
Intraosseous access device | Accessible | Will depend on local policy and staff training |
Dressing Pads x 2 | Immediate |
Community hospitals care: adult
Other Items
Item | Suggested availability | Comments |
---|---|---|
Clock/timer | Accessible | |
Gloves, aprons, eye protection | Immediate | Further personal protective equipment may be required according to local policy |
Sharps container and clinical waste bag | Accessible | Sharps container must be immediately available wherever sharps used |
2% chlorhexidine / alcohol wipes | Accessible | |
Blood sample tubes | Accessible | Usually in clinical room, must not delay transfer |
Blood glucose analyser with appropriate strips | Accessible | According to local policy |
Manual handling equipment | Accessible | According to setting. See Guidance for safer handling during resuscitation in healthcare settings |
Cardiorespiratory arrest record forms for patient notes, Audit forms and DNACPR forms | Accessible | |
Access to algorithms, emergency drug doses | Accessible |
Community hospitals care: adult
CARDIAC ARREST DRUGS – FIRST LINE for intravenous use !
Item | Suggested availability | Comments |
---|---|---|
Adrenaline 1mg (= 10 ml 1:10,000) IV as a prefilled syringe x 3 | Immediate | Number of syringes depends on access to further syringes. 1 syringe needed for each 4-5 min of CPR. Will depend on local policy and staff training |
Amiodarone 300mg as a prefilled syringe x1 | Accessible | First dose required after 3 defibrillation attempts. Will depend on local policy and staff training |
Community hospitals care: adult
Other drugs
Item | Suggested availability | Comments |
---|---|---|
Adrenaline 1mg (1 ml 1:1000) IM | Immediate | First line for anaphylaxis – 0.5 mg intramuscular injection in adults |
Chlorphenamine 10 mg IV / IM x 2 | Accessible | Second line for anaphylaxis, can also be given intramuscularly. Will depend on local policy and staff training |
Hydrocortisone 100 mg IM / IV x 2 | Accessible | Second line for anaphylaxis, can also be given intramuscularly. Will depend on local policy and staff training |
Aspirin 300 mg and other antithrombotic agents | Accessible | For acute coronary syndrome. Will depend on local policy and staff training |
Furosemide 50 mg IV x 2 | Accessible | Will depend on local policy and staff training |
Flumazenil 0.5 mg IV x 2 | Accessible | Will depend on local policy and staff training |
Nalaxone 400 micrograms x 5 IM /IV | Accessible | Will depend on local policy and staff training |
Midazolam 10 mg (1ml) Buccal | Accessible | Will depend on local policy and staff training |
Glucagon 1 mg IM / IV x 1 | Accessible | |
GTN spray | Accessible | |
Ipratropium bromide 500 microgram nebules x 2 (and nebulizer device) | Accessible | Will depend on local policy and staff training |
Salbutamol 5 mg nebules x 2 (and nebulizer device) | Accessible |
Notes
- A 999 ambulance must be called for any cardiorespiratory arrest unless there is a local resuscitation team available.
- Keeping resuscitation drugs locked away - this problem was addressed in detail in 2005 by the Royal Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain in a revision of the Duthie Report (1988) ‘The Safe and Secure Handling of Medicines’. Resuscitation Council UK responded with a statement, along with an accompanying letter written to the CQC explaining the position.
Supporting information
- Association of Anaesthetists of Great Britain and Ireland (AAGBI) Safety Guideline – Interhospital Transfer. 2009. www.aagbi.org
- Intensive Care Society. Transfer Of The Critically Ill Adult 2019 https://www.ics.ac.uk/ICS/ICS/GuidelinesAndStandards/ICSGuidelines.aspx
- The Hospital Management of Hypoglycaemia in Adults with Diabetes Mellitus https://www.diabetes.org.uk/Documents/About%20Us/Our%20views/Care%20recs/JBDS%20hypoglycaemia%20position%20(2013).pdf
The equipment and drug lists in this chapter are for paediatric community hospitals care.
Drug tables for cardiac arrest are highlighted in the text with the symbol !
Community hospitals care: paediatric
Airway and breathing
Item | Suggested availability | Comments |
---|---|---|
Pocket mask with oxygen port & oxygen tubing | Immediate | Will depend on local policy and staff training |
Oxygen mask with reservoir & oxygen tubing | Immediate | Will depend on local policy and staff training |
Self-inflating bag with reservoir & oxygen tubing | Immediate | Will depend on local policy and staff training |
Oropharyngeal airways size 0, 1 and tongue depressor | Immediate | Will depend on local policy and staff training |
Portable suction (battery or manual) with Yankauer sucker and soft suction catheters | Immediate | Soft suction catheters will be dependent on the suction device available |
Oxygen cylinder (with key if necessary) | Immediate |
Community hospitals care: paediatric
Circulation
Item | Suggested availability | Comments |
---|---|---|
Defibrillator - Manual defibrillator and/or automated external defibrillator (AED) | Immediate | Type of defibrillator and locations decided by a local risk assessment. AEDs are not suitable for infants (less than 12 months old) and this should be considered at risk assessment |
Adhesive defibrillator pads – paediatric and adult sizes | Immediate | Spare set of pads also recommended |
Intravenous cannulae (selection of sizes) and 2% chlorhexidine / alcohol wipes, tourniquets and dressings | Accessible | Will depend on local policy and staff training |
Adhesive tape | Accessible | |
Intravenous infusion sets (with and without incorporated burette) | Accessible | Will depend on local policy and staff training |
IV extension set with 3-way taps and bungs | Accessible | Will depend on local policy and staff training |
0.9% sodium chloride | Accessible | Will depend on local policy and staff training |
10% Dextrose | Accessible | |
Selection of needles and syringes | Accessible | |
Intraosseous access device with needles suitable for children and adults | Accessible |
Community hospitals care: paediatric
CARDIAC ARREST DRUGS – FIRST LINE for intravenous use !
Item | Suggested availability | Comments |
---|---|---|
Adrenaline 1mg (= 10 ml 1:10,000) prefilled syringe(s)* | Immediate | According to local policy |
Amiodarone 300 mg as a prefilled syringe x1* |
*These lists refer to drug availability and not to the doses used for the treatment of children. For correct dosing, please refer to this chart.
Community hospitals care: paediatric
Other items
Item | Suggested availability | Comments |
---|---|---|
Clock / timer | Accessible | |
Gloves, aprons, eye protection | Immediate | |
Manual handling equipment | Accessible | According to setting. See Guidance for safer handling during resuscitation in healthcare settings |
Cardiac arrest record form for patient notes and audit forms | Accessible |
Community hospitals care: paediatric
Other emergency drugs
Item | Suggested availability | Comments |
---|---|---|
Adrenaline 1mg (1 ml 1:1000) IM* | Immediate | First line for anaphylaxis for intramuscular use |
Glucagon 1 mg IM x 1* | Accessible | |
Salbutamol 5mg nebules x 2 (and nebulizer device)* | Accessible | |
Chlorphenamine 10 mg IM x 2* | Second line for anaphylaxis, can also be given intramuscularly Will depend on local policy and staff training |
|
Hydrocortisone 100 mg IM / IV x 2* | Second line for anaphylaxis, can also be given intramuscularly. Will depend on local policy and staff training |
*These lists refer to drug availability and not to the doses used for the treatment of children. For correct dosing, please refer to this chart.
Notes
- A 999 ambulance must be called for any cardiorespiratory arrest unless there is a local resuscitation team available.
- Keeping resuscitation drugs locked away - this problem was addressed in detail in 2005 by the Royal Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain in a revision of the Duthie Report (1988) ‘The Safe and Secure Handling of Medicines’. Resuscitation Council UK responded with a statement, along with an accompanying letter written to the CQC explaining the position.
Supporting information
- The Hospital Management of Hypoglycaemia in Adults with Diabetes Mellitus https://www.diabetes.org.uk/Documents/About%20Us/Our%20views/Care%20recs/JBDS%20hypoglycaemia%20position%20(2013).pdf