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Tri-City launches new emergency code for babies

OCEANSIDE -- Thursday, April 5, was a poignant day for the Peltier family of Vista and the Tri-City Medical Center staff who saved their newborn son.

At 9 a.m., a voice on the hospital’s intercom system announced the commencement of “Code Caleb” in the Emergency Department. It was the formal launching of a new hospital code, one the Peltiers and hospital staff hope will save babies in distress, babies such as 3-day-old Caleb Peltier, who was unconscious when he was brought into the Emergency Department on Sept. 21, 2010.

Caleb, who was barely breathing, was saved by Dr. Gene Ma, head of the Emergency Department, and Dr. Hamid Movahhedian, a neonatologist and pediatric cardiologist who quickly diagnosed the infant’s congenital heart defect.

That was 18 months ago.

The case was the catalyst for hospital staff, led by Dr. Movahhedian, to formalize a process that would ensure all babies get the immediate care they need when they come into Tri-City’s Emergency Department.

Code Caleb is intended to sound an alarm for any baby under 60 days old. The hospital already has a Code Pink for children under 14 who are brought into the emergency room with life-threatening conditions.

The months of planning that went into preparing for the launch of Code Caleb were on display Thursday as hospital staff performed a drill to hone their skills. On hand to witness the demonstration were members of the Peltier family.

It was the first time the Peltiers had been back to the ER since Caleb’s initial visit. The drill took place in the same room where Caleb lay in distress, his parents helpless to comfort their newborn son. Standing there, watching and listening as the nurses and doctors worked on an imaginary patient the same age as Caleb, “was tough,” said mom Casey Peltier.

Several of Caleb’s family members burst into tears as the drill got under way because it triggered memories of that difficult and uncertain time. Young Caleb was not present for the drill. He was home resting. While he’s doing well, he faces surgery to repair a sub-aortic valve, his mom said.

The process behind Code Caleb was developed over the last year by Tri-City nurses Melissa Van Nostran and Wendy Rosenberger from the Emergency Department, Nancy Myers from the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit and Ann Sidney from the Education Department. The group looked at the logistics involved in having a baby admitted to the ED who is in need of critical neonatal care. They investigated what equipment would be needed, Myers said, and how to fold in the two teams from two very different worlds – the Emergency Department and the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit. Once the pieces were in place, the program was brought before the hospital’s medical staff and board for approval.

Nancy Myers also pushed the program back out in the community, working with paramedics in the field to ensure babies began receiving critical, life-saving care before they reach the hospital.

Caleb’s dad, Daniel Peltier, praised Tri-City’s staff for saving his son. “God knows what the outcome would have been” had Caleb been taken to another hospital ill-equipped to handle the infant’s condition, he said. "Thank God he ended up here.”

About Tri-City Medical Center:

Tri-City Medical Center is a Gold Seal-approved, full-service, acute-care hospital with two advanced clinical
institutes and physicians practicing in 60 specialties. The hospital, a leader in robotics and minimally invasive technologies, has served the community for more than a half-century. It is administered by the Tri-City Healthcare
District, which includes parts or all of Oceanside, Vista, Carlsbad and San Marcos. For more information about Tri-City Medical Center, please visit www.tricitymed.org

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Gretel.
Carrie Turner May 17, 2013 at 04:02 pm
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Things I Learned May 11, 2013 at 11:25 pm
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Scott H. Kidwell May 11, 2013 at 10:43 pm
The mail was delivered and the two bags of non-perishables my wife placed out right below the mailRead More box are still there!
Libi Uremovic May 13, 2013 at 05:25 pm
the person that wrote this article has the same logic and reasoning skills as the ib cityRead More manager...very similar styles...
Libi Uremovic May 13, 2013 at 05:23 pm
'...MPH degree program to attend a 3-day workshop ... challenge the CNA licensure examination inRead More California.... ... Aristotle felt that by becoming licensed professionals in the U.S. shortly after their arrival to the shores of the U.S., they would have a greater opportunity to receive better clinical positions when they applied for the work-study internships that they were eligible to participate in....' the school told students that were enrolled in masters' degrees that certification as a cna was part of the road to obtaining a masters degree ?? stop right there... masters in public health is an administrative position that has nothing to do with being a cna....and i'm sure people didn't travel thousands of miles to do the grunt work in a hospital.... yea, getting a cna license is a great suggestion for an 18 year old that's going into the nursing field....but not for someone in the masters' program.... and fyi phony college.....in this country a person has to have a 4 year degree before they can apply for the masters' program....
Mark Williams May 12, 2013 at 11:20 pm
Yep!