The year 2020 marks the 50th anniversary of the landmark publication on the bedside clinical use of a flow-directed catheter. The catheter, now known as the Swan-Ganz catheter, truly revolutionized practice and care of the critically ill. Use of the catheter proliferated nearly without rigorous validation or evidence base until a moratorium was called in regard to its use. This article describes the history of the development of the Swan-Ganz catheter, its uses, and its near downfall. The authors, both involved in educating clinicians in the use of the pulmonary artery catheter, hope that telling this story shares tribal knowledge and lessons learned with newer generations of nurses who did not experience the explosion of development and knowledge in the area of hemodynamic monitoring. Partly because of advances in technology, and the catheter’s application for heart failure in particular, use of the pulmonary catheter is being resurrected.
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Spring 2020
Symposium Fiftieth Anniversary of the Swan-Ganz Catheter: From then Until Now|
March 15 2020
Narrative History of the Swan-Ganz Catheter: Development, Education, Controversies, and Clinician Acumen
Jan M. Headley, BS, RN;
Jan M. Headley, BS, RN
Jan M. Headley is Principal, Consultants in Acute and Critical Care, PTY 880853, PO Box 025724, Miami, FL 33102-5724 (jan@janmheadley.com).
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Thomas Ahrens, PhD, RN
Thomas Ahrens, PhD, RN
Thomas Ahrens is Chief Learning Officer, NovEx, St Louis, Missouri.
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AACN Adv Crit Care (2020) 31 (1): 25–33.
Citation
Jan M. Headley, Thomas Ahrens; Narrative History of the Swan-Ganz Catheter: Development, Education, Controversies, and Clinician Acumen. AACN Adv Crit Care 15 March 2020; 31 (1): 25–33. doi: https://doi.org/10.4037/aacnacc2020992
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