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Non-Acute Care

AccuVein NIR guided venous assessment is an essential first step in peripheral IV therapy.

A More Complete Picture = Better Informed Decisions/PIVC Insertions.

AccuVein supports an advanced approach to peripheral IV assessment and access by projecting a vivid map on the skin of underlying superficial veins, bifurcations, and valves often impalpable and invisible to the naked eye.

An AccuVein NIR guided site assessment supports best practices.

Leading professional societies recommend using near-infrared (NIR) vein assessment to support better informed decision-making and care quality. When clinicians use an AccuVein device for pre-insertion assessment, they can rapidly identify optimal vein targets. This not only dramatically increases first attempt success and reduces escalation calls, but it also helps ensure that catheters last for the duration of therapy.

Non-Acute Care

AccuVein For

Learn how AccuVein delivers value across the healthcare setting.

Improve Patient and Staff Well-Being

By integrating advanced technology into standard protocols and supporting the highest level of care, hospitals can dramatically improve the patient experience while demonstrating a deep commitment to a multi-generational workforce with varying knowledge, skills and experience.

#1 patient concern is pain

associated with multiple needle sticks1

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100%

of hospital HR professionals agree that employee and patient satisfaction is a top priority2

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82% of nurses

believe that technology has a positive impact on patient care4

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Fewer than 57%

of nursing students receive PIVC insertion instruction3

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84% of nurses surveyed prefer AccuVein

to traditional PIVC techniques6

39% reduction in pain and 45% reduction in patient stress

with AccuVein-guided IV insertion5

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80% of staff

surveyed reported more efficient access site assessment with AccuVein6

Accuvein Breaks the Cycle of Waste, Saving Time and Money

The Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI) has recognized that expending time and resources without adding value to patients is the very definition of waste. Increased first-stick success, decreased escalations, and improved resource allocation are all ways that AccuVein can help enhance efficiency and deliver greater profitability to a busy hospital.

Up to 50% of first stick attempts fail7

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23.5%

of hospital acquired BSIs were in patients with PIVCs8

Up to 43% of PICCS are “non-essential”

and placed due to difficult or failed PIVC access in some care settings10-11

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54% increase in complications

when 2 or more puncture attempts are performed9

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45% decrease in escalation calls

with AccuVein (when implemented across various nursing units)12

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78% reduction in PIV procedure time

with AccuVein13

1. Steere L, Ficara C, Davis M, Moureau N. Reaching One Peripheral Intravenous Catheter (PIVC) Per Patient Visit with Lean Multimodal Strategy: the PIV5Rights™ Bundle. Journal of the Association for Vascular Access (2019) 24 (3): 31–43. Available here.
2. Enhancing Nurse Well-Being Nationwide HOLLIBLU and Feedtrail Mental Health Nurse Survey. Available here.
3. Glover KR, Stahl BR, Murray C, et al. A Simulation-Based Blended Curriculum for Short Peripheral Intravenous Catheter Insertion: An Industry-Practice Collaboration. J Contin Educ Nurs. 2017. Available here.
4. https://avanthealthcare.com/blog/articles/how-technology-is-impacting-nursing-practice-in-2019.stml
5. Guillon P., Makhloufi, M., “prospective evaluation of venous access difficulty and a near-infrared vein visualizer at four French hemophilia treatment centers, “ Hemophilia (2014), 1-6. Available here
6. Horn ME, Molchanskly. Evaluation of the Use of Newar-Infrared Vein Visualization Technology in a Community Hospital: a Value-Added Clinical Experience. 2021. AVA Annual Scientific Meeting. Orlando FL. Available here.
7. Helm RE, Klausner JD, Klemperer JD, Flint LM, Huang E. Accepted but unacceptable: peripheral IV catheter failure. J Infus Nurs.2015; 38(3):189-203.
8. Stuart RL, Cameron DR, Scott C, et al. Peripheral intravenous catheter-associated Staphylococcus aureus bacteraemia: more than 5 years of prospective data from two tertiary health services. Med J Aust. 2013;198(10):551-553. doi:10.5694/mja12.11699. Available here.
9. Infection Control Today, May 2020, Vol4, No.4, Establishing Vascular Access Teams for Patient Safety Nancy Moureau, RN, PhD, CRNI, CPUI, VA-BC
10. Reeves T, Morrison D, Altmiller G. A Nurse-Led Ultrasound-Enhanced Vascular Access Preservation Program. Am J Nurs. 2017 Dec;117(12):56-64. doi: 10.1097/01.NAJ.0000527490.24610.51. PMID: 29189249. Govindan S. Available here.
11. Snyder A, Flanders SA, Chopra V. Peripherally Inserted Central Catheters in the ICU: A Retrospective Study of Adult Medical Patients in 52 Hospitals. Crit Care Med. 2018 Dec;46(12):e1136-e1144. doi: 10.1097/CCM. 0000000000003423. PMID: 30247241; PMCID: PMC6317857
12. Delvo-Favre E, Daneti G, Guin P. Implementation of Near-Infrared Technology (AccuVein AV400) to Facilitate Successful PIV Cannulation. Poster session at 2014 INS Annual Meeting. Abstract J Infus Nurs 2014, vol 37 No. 4). Available here.
13. Demir D, Inal S. Does the Use of a Vein Visualization Device for Peripheral Venous Catheter Placement Increase Success Rate in Pediatric Patients? Pediatr Emerg Care. 2019;35(7):474-479. Available here.

NIR Vein Visualization Conforms with INS Practice Recommendations

As stated in the INS 2021 Standards: “Use near-infrared (NIR) light technology to aid in locating viable superficial peripheral venous sites and decreasing procedure time for peripheral intravenous catheter (PIVC) insertion.”5

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