Intermountain Healthcare is the nation's first integrated health system to use the new needle-free PIVO blood collection across all of its 22 hospitals.
Intermountain Healthcare is the nation’s first integrated health system to use the new needle-free PIVO blood collection across all of its 22 hospitals.

Intermountain Healthcare implements needle-free PIVO for inpatient blood draws

Investing in human-centered quality improvements, Intermountain Healthcare sets the new clinical standard for safer, more efficient, and more humane blood collection

By Daron Cowley

As part of its commitment to transform the patient and caregiver experience while delivering high quality care, Intermountain Healthcare announced Sept. 12 that it is the first integrated health system in the U.S. to implement a new needle-free blood collection system across all of its 22 hospitals. Following 180,000 peripheral intravenous catheter — or PIVO — blood draws during evaluation and subsequently through a system-wide rollout, Intermountain Healthcare is now delivering the nation’s future standard-of-care in patient and practitioner-centered blood collection and vascular access.

“It is impossible to remove the blood draw from medicine, but Intermountain is showing the world that you can remove the needle from inpatient blood draws,” said Kim Henrichsen, Intermountain Healthcare senior vice president of clinical operations and chief nursing executive. “We are incredibly proud of the fact that needles are no longer the standard for this critical medical procedure at Intermountain. We look forward to helping the rest of the nation embrace this change and respectfully challenge the status quo.”

Intermountain collaborated with San Francisco-based Velano Vascular to test, refine, and pilot the company’s needle-free PIVO technology. The device connects to an indwelling peripheral IV catheter, commonly used for access and infusion in hospitalized patients, enabling practitioners to extract blood from the vein. PIVO is now available and in use for inpatient blood drawing at all 22 Intermountain hospitals and will be implemented at the 23rd and newest Intermountain Layton Hospital, opening later this year.

During the organization’s clinical collaboration with Velano, and as part of the system-wide rollout initiated last fall, Intermountain has conducted extensive PIVO blood draws. The results have been overwhelmingly positive, demonstrating a high quality of collection, a vastly improved experience and satisfaction for both patients and practitioners, and reduced risk of injury and enhanced efficiency — particularly in difficult venous access populations — for hospital practitioners.

“The new [PIVO] device saves me from 10 or more needle stabs in a day for blood every 4 to 6 hours,” said one 40-year-old Intermountain patient. “It has been phenomenal and completely painless — I don’t feel a thing and even fall asleep through it. PIVO saves me from the normal stress and anxiety of a poke.”

“Innovating around the obvious for such a seemingly simple and overlooked practice can have a massive impact on a hospital system, and the experience of both its patients and caregivers,” said Todd Dunn, director of Innovation at Intermountain. “Driven by our passion to Design for People, this program proved that innovation is a collaborative team sport, bringing together partners in empathy like Velano with our own clinicians and patients to arrive at a new standard that we can help champion nationwide for the millions of others who still endure outdated, antiquated approaches to drawing blood.”

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