FFH Network × 360 SCD Hub × [Your Institution]
🩺 Prepared Medical Professional Series · SCD Course #1 · For Hospital Nurses & ER Staff

Become a Certified Prepared Medical Professional
for Sickle Cell Disease

A guided learning path for nurses, ER staff, and frontline clinicians caring for patients with sickle cell disease. Faster, bias-aware pain crisis triage. Cleaner discharge workflows. Smarter phone triage. Fewer return visits and complaints — and the skills to mentor the next cohort.

3CLINICAL LITERACY LAYERS
10EVIDENCE-BASED COMPETENCIES
3IDENTITIES YOU EARN
1BIAS-AWARE CARE NOTE TEMPLATE
Patient Course ↗
1
Learn It
2
Live It
3
Share It
Force Field strength: 0% (0/10 competencies)
Demo Banner Health client preview · Friday 2026-05-08 · synthetic training cohort for walk-through. Use these buttons to populate or reset the demo experience.
Customizable Welcome from [Your Hospital Name]. Course administrator: [Director of ED Nursing Education — (555) 123-4567]. SCD clinical lead consult line: [Hematology Attending On-Call — (555) 222-9000]. CE/contact-hour credit submitted via [your hospital LMS].
↔ Patient Companion Course Your patients are learning the Prepared Patient · Sickle Cell Disease course. Same Force Field architecture, patient-facing framing. Their Force Field Card is the data you reference at point of care — open the patient course to see exactly what your SCD patients are taught and what they bring to the bedside. Open Patient Course →
🛡 Quick Reference Need a 60-second SCD refresher between rooms? The 16-square Force Field Fact Sheet is the same one your patients carry. Print one for the unit board. Open Fact Sheet →
⚡ +1 Companion Module When SCD & HTN Meet — The Stroke-Risk Story. Most adults with SCD also develop hypertension. The intersection produces the highest preventable-stroke burden in U.S. populations. Click to open this cross-condition module. Open Module →
🏅Your Path to Certification Aware → Active → Certified · click to expand

Your Path to Certification

Earn your way up three evidence-based tiers. Each builds on the last. Finish all three and receive your Certified Prepared Medical Professional · Sickle Cell Disease badge and printable certificate, recognized across the FFH Network and submittable for CE / contact-hour credit through your hospital's LMS.

Tier 1

Aware · Identity: Bias-Aware Practitioner

You know SCD pathophysiology, the bias patterns, and what the patient brings to the bedside. Layer 1 — Clinical Foundations.

  • Complete Modules 1–4 (Clinical Foundations)
  • Score ≥4/5 on each module's Post-Check (same items as Pre-Check)
  • Recite the unit's time-to-first-dose target and SCD acute pain pathway
  • Read the Force Field Emergency Card before scoring pain on every SCD patient
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Tier 2

Active · Identity: Protocol Champion

You run the ER, discharge, and phone-triage workflows on protocol — every shift, every patient. Layer 2 — ER Protocol · Discharge · Phone Triage.

  • Complete Modules 5–7 (ER on-protocol pain · Discharge · Phone triage)
  • Demonstrate the SCD acute pain pathway end-to-end with a peer observing
  • Run one phone-triage call using the structured script
  • Document the full arrival → triage → IV → first-dose → reassess timeline on every SCD ED visit
  • Hit the unit's time-to-first-dose target on at least 5 consecutive SCD ED visits
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Tier 3 · Certified

Certified Prepared Medical Professional · Identity: SCD Mentor

You lead the M&M, mentor the next nurse, drive policy, and report unit data into the FFH PHIT ROI study. Layer 3 — Mentoring, Advocacy & Continuous Improvement.

  • Complete Modules 8–10 (M&M · Mentoring · Advocacy/CE/Certification)
  • Onboard at least one new nurse using the 60-second SCD pathway briefing
  • Co-present one de-identified SCD case at unit M&M (system-mapping framing)
  • Submit unit time-to-first-dose audit data to FFH PHIT (quarterly)
  • Sign the Prepared Medical Professional Pledge
  • Submit CE / contact-hour paperwork through your hospital LMS
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📋Master Pre / Post Assessment 7 Likert dimensions · open to take or review

Where You Stand — Clinical Confidence Before & After

Seven dimensions of being a Prepared Medical Professional · SCD. Answer once at the start of the course and again at the end. Your goal is to see real growth across pathophysiology fluency, bias awareness, ER protocol fluency, discharge & phone triage, and optimal utilization — routing patients to the right care, at the right time, in the right place. Your answers stay on this device; aggregate de-identified deltas feed the FFH PHIT ROI study with your consent.

📈 Your Pre→Post Growth

Saved on this device · No backend yet · PHIT integration after Banner demo
📞Know Who to Call — Before the ER 911 vs same-day vs portal · click to expand

Know Who to Call — Before the ER

For most non-life-threatening SCD events, your specialty team can help faster than the ER and prevent unnecessary admissions. Save these numbers in your phone today. The numbers below are placeholders — your institution will fill in the right ones for you.

🌡️ Fever ≥ 101°F (38.5°C) — call within 1 hour

People with SCD are at high risk for serious infection. Don't wait, don't drive to the ER first. Call [Hematology On-Call: (555) 222-9000] 24/7. They'll tell you if you can come to [Day Hospital, 3rd floor, M–F 7a–9p] or need to go to ER. Bring your Health Passport.

🩹 Pain crisis you can't break at home — call before going anywhere

Try your home plan first (heat, hydration, scheduled meds, breathing). If pain is still ≥ 6/10 after [2 hours], call [SCD Day Hospital: (555) 222-9100]. They can usually treat you faster than the ER and avoid a hospital stay.

💬 Routine questions, refills, scheduling

Use [MyChart portal] first — most messages answered within 1 business day. For meds about to run out, call [SCD pharmacy line: (555) 222-9050].

🚑 Call 911 right away for any of these

Sudden weakness on one side · trouble speaking · vision change · chest pain or trouble breathing · fainting · a painful erection lasting > 4 hours (priapism) · severe headache. These can be stroke, acute chest syndrome, or other emergencies — don't drive yourself.

📚The 10 Prepared Medical Professional Competencies

A Prepared Medical Professional builds three kinds of clinical literacy — and grows into three identities. Each competency works through the FFH three pillars: Learn It · Live It · Share It.

🧠

Bias-Aware Practitioner

You read the SCD patient on protocol — not on impression — and close the time-to-first-dose gap.

🩺

Protocol Champion

You run the ER, discharge, and phone-triage workflows without drift, every shift, every patient.

🎓

SCD Mentor

You teach the next nurse, lead the M&M, and turn one trained clinician into a unit-wide standard.

1

🧠 Clinical Foundations Learn It · Tier 1 Aware

"I know SCD pathophysiology, the bias patterns, and what the patient brings to the bedside." The foundation. Without this, every shift starts behind.

Identity earned: Bias-Aware PractitionerCompetencies 1–4
1 🩹

Pain Crisis Recognition & Anti-Bias Triage

The first 60 seconds. The operational definition of vaso-occlusive crisis, the 3 documented patterns of implicit bias in SCD pain assessment, and the time-to-first-dose target your unit is held accountable to.

Learn ItLive It
My confidence (1–5)
Pre: — · Post: —
2 🧬

SCD Pathophysiology Refresher

HbS polymerization, hemolysis, vaso-occlusion, endothelial activation, functional asplenia, chronic inflammation. The mechanisms that explain why every clinical decision matters.

Learn It
My confidence (1–5)
Pre: — · Post: —
3 🚨

The Three Life-Threats: ACS · Splenic Sequestration · Stroke

Acute chest syndrome, splenic sequestration, and stroke (overt + silent) are the SCD presentations that kill. Recognition signs, time-critical workups, and escalation paths.

Learn ItLive It
My confidence (1–5)
Pre: — · Post: —
4 🛡️

Reading the Patient's Tools

The Force Field Emergency Card, OnDemand Pain Plan, baseline labs, baseline pain scale. Your patient walks in with the data — your job is to use it.

Learn ItLive It
My confidence (1–5)
Pre: — · Post: —
2

🩺 ER Protocol · Discharge · Phone Triage Live It · Tier 2 Active

"I run the workflows on protocol, every shift." This is the contracted core of the course — the three workflows where SCD care most often goes right or wrong. Optimal utilization lives here.

Identity earned: Protocol ChampionCompetencies 5–7
5 💉

ER On-Protocol Pain Management

Time-to-first-dose target, IV opioid dosing per pathway, oxygen, IV fluids, warming, hematology consult notification, reassessment cadence. The unit's accountability checklist.

Learn ItLive It
My confidence (1–5)
Pre: — · Post: —
6 🚪

Discharge Criteria & Workflow

When it's safe to discharge a vaso-occlusive crisis. The discharge packet (return precautions, hematology follow-up window, refill plan, school/work note). Closing the loop with the patient's hematologist.

Learn ItLive It
My confidence (1–5)
Pre: — · Post: —
7 📞

Phone Triage Decision Tree

Vaso-occlusive crisis at home vs ED-required. Day Hospital routing. When to escalate to hematology. The script and the documentation that protect both the patient and the system.

Learn ItLive It
My confidence (1–5)
Pre: — · Post: —
3

🎓 Mentoring · M&M · Advocacy Share It · Tier 3 Certified

"I lift the next clinician. I lead the debrief. I shape the unit's standard." This is what turns one trained nurse into a unit-wide standard — and a unit into a network.

Identity earned: SCD MentorCompetencies 8–10
8 🔄

M&M, Debrief & Continuous Improvement

Closing the loop on bias and protocol drift. Time-to-first-dose audits, complaint reviews, de-identified case M&M, what gets measured + reported back to the unit.

My confidence (1–5)
Pre: — · Post: —
9 🎓

Mentoring Junior Staff

The 60-second SCD onboarding for every new nurse. Bedside coaching, scripts for redirecting non-pathway language, building the unit's bias-aware default state.

My confidence (1–5)
Pre: — · Post: —
10 🏆

Advocacy, CE & Certification

SCDAA chapter partnership, hospital policy work, CE/contact-hour pathways, FFH Network certification, and how your unit's data feeds the PHIT ROI study.

My confidence (1–5)
Pre: — · Post: —
🩸Form & Function — Sickle Cell Disease in 3D red cells · vessels · spleen · lungs · brain · bone marrow · click to expand

Form & Function — Sickle Cell Disease in 3D

Your SCD patients are learning this same anatomy in their Prepared Patient course. Walking through it yourself sharpens your own model, and closing the patient–clinician gap on terminology is one of the highest-leverage things a unit can do. Same BioDigital 3D explorer, same vocabulary, two audiences.

🩸 Red blood cells & vessels

HbS polymerization → sickled cells jam vessels (vaso-occlusion) and break apart faster than the marrow can replace them (hemolysis). Hydroxyurea raises HbF and reduces sickling.

🦠 Spleen

Auto-infarcted in early childhood → functional asplenia → infection risk for life. Drives the daily-penicillin and full-vaccination protocols.

🫁 Lungs

Acute Chest Syndrome — top cause of SCD adult mortality. Sickling in pulmonary vessels + infection + atelectasis. Watch for chest pain, fever, hypoxia post-VOC.

🧠 Brain

Silent & overt strokes, especially pediatric HbSS. TCD screening ages 2–16. Cognitive deficits routinely missed unless screened.

🦴 Bone marrow & joints

Vaso-occlusion in bone → pain crises (the hallmark). AVN of hips and shoulders is common in adults. Pain is real — treat on protocol.

🫘 Kidneys

Hypertonic medulla traps sickle cells → progressive loss of urine concentration → proteinuria → CKD. Annual UACR + eGFR; ACE/ARB at first sign of albumin.

3D ANATOMY EXPLORER · LIVE Walk through bone marrow, red blood cells, vessels and the organs SCD affects most in an interactive BioDigital Human 3D model. This is exactly what your patients see in their Prepared Patient course — open it once so you and the patient share the same map. Open 360 Anatomy →

💡 Through-line for clinicians: five levers that change outcomes

(1) Disease-modifying therapy — hydroxyurea (HbF induction), L-glutamine, crizanlizumab, voxelotor, gene therapy (Casgevy/Lyfgenia 2023). (2) Infection prevention — daily penicillin (peds) + full pneumococcal/meningococcal/Hib/influenza/COVID vaccination for life. (3) Hydration + warmth + oxygen — keep cells flexible. (4) On-protocol acute pain management — no second-class care; the time-to-first-dose target is the operational measure. (5) Annual surveillance — TCD (peds), eye, kidney, sleep apnea, mental health, cognitive.

👥My Care Team default team members · click to expand

My Care Team

Your team is bigger than just the doctor. Click any card to edit, or click the + tile to add a new team member. Saved on this device. The Force Field Emergency Card below auto-syncs from this list.

Edit Team Member

📖Glossary — words you'll hear 10 plain-English terms · click any to expand

Plain-English definitions for terms doctors and labs use. Tap to expand.

Hydroxyurea (Droxia, Siklos)
A daily pill that makes your red blood cells less sticky by raising fetal hemoglobin (HbF). It cuts pain crises and acute chest events roughly in half for most adults. Takes 2–6 months to fully work. Most adults with HbSS or HbSβ⁰ should be offered it. Goal: HbF > 20% for many patients.
Voxelotor (Oxbryta), Crizanlizumab (Adakveo), L-glutamine (Endari)
Newer SCD medicines that work in different ways than hydroxyurea. Voxelotor raises hemoglobin. Crizanlizumab is an IV monthly that cuts crises. L-glutamine is a powder. Your team picks based on your pattern, age, kidneys, and goals. Always available as add-ons; not replacements for hydroxyurea unless you can't take it.
Acute Chest Syndrome (ACS)
A life-threatening complication: chest pain + cough + fever + low oxygen + something new on the chest X-ray. It's the #1 cause of death in adults with SCD. Tell every ER team you have SCD risk for this — they should check oxygen and chest X-ray fast.
Splenic Sequestration
When red cells suddenly trap inside the spleen, dropping your blood count fast. More common in young children. Belly gets big and tender, you get pale and tired. Emergency. Caregivers should know how to feel for the spleen at the left ribcage.
Priapism
A painful erection lasting > 4 hours, caused by trapped blood. 911 / ER if > 4 hours. Drink water, walk, urinate, take pain med — but still go in. Repeated short episodes? Tell your team — there's a prevention plan.
Transcranial Doppler (TCD)
A painless ultrasound of brain blood flow done yearly in children with HbSS / HbSβ⁰ from age 2–16. High velocity = high stroke risk and triggers a transfusion program. The single most powerful stroke-prevention tool we have.
Reticulocyte count (retic)
How fast your bone marrow is making new red blood cells. In SCD, your retic should normally be high (because you're constantly replacing destroyed cells). A low retic with worsening anemia is a red flag — could mean parvovirus B19 (aplastic crisis).
Genotype: HbSS, HbSC, HbSβ⁰, HbSβ⁺
Your specific kind of sickle cell. HbSS and HbSβ⁰ are usually the most severe — more crises, more anemia. HbSC and HbSβ⁺ are usually milder but still real. Your screening tools, vaccines, and meds depend on which one you have. Find yours and write it on your Health Passport.
Curative options: HCT & gene therapy
Bone marrow transplant (HCT) from a matched sibling donor is curative and well-established. Gene therapies (Casgevy, Lyfgenia — FDA-approved late 2023) are newer one-time treatments. Eligibility, risk, cost, and fertility implications are complex — bring it up at every annual visit if interested.
"Adult care transition" (ages 14–25)
Moving from a pediatric SCD team to an adult one. Highest-risk window — many people fall through the cracks here. Your team should start the transition plan by age 14. You should leave childhood care with: your records, a portable summary, your med list, and the name & number of your new adult provider.
🧪Lab Test Tutor — what your numbers mean 8 lab tests · click to expand

Lab Test Tutor — what your numbers mean

Don't just see a number — know what it means and what to ask. Your "normal" may be different from a friend's. Ask your hematologist to write your personal baseline in the column on the right.

TestWhat it measuresTypical adult rangeWhat to ask if it's offMy baseline
Hemoglobin (Hgb)How much oxygen-carrying protein you have.SCD adults often run 6–9 g/dLIs this drop > 2 from my baseline?[fill in]
Reticulocyte %New red cells your marrow is making.SCD: usually 5–20%If LOW with anemia — parvovirus screen?[fill in]
HbF (fetal hemoglobin)Best protective hemoglobin. Hydroxyurea raises it.Goal often > 20%Should we increase hydroxyurea?[fill in]
LDHMarker of red cell breakdown.Often elevated in SCDIs mine higher than my baseline today?[fill in]
FerritinIron stores — high after many transfusions.< 1000 ng/mL idealDo I need an iron-removal medicine?[fill in]
Creatinine / GFRKidney function.GFR > 90 normalShould I avoid NSAIDs?[fill in]
Urine albuminEarly kidney damage signal.< 30 mg/g normalShould I start an ACE/ARB?[fill in]
O₂ saturationHow well your lungs deliver oxygen.≥ 95% in clinicIs mine running low? Sleep study?[fill in]
Add-On Modules & Earnable Badges Pregnancy · Transition · Travel · Trial · click to expand

Add-On Modules & Earnable Badges

Stackable modules that match your situation. Complete one to earn an extra badge on your certificate. Your institution can add their own.

Add-on
👶 Pregnancy with SCD

Pre-conception counseling, transfusion strategy, anesthesia plan, postpartum risks.

Add-on
🌱 Transition to Adult Care

Ages 14–25. Build your portable summary and meet your adult team.

Trial
🧪 In a Clinical Trial?

Add: protocol literacy, side-effect tracking, when to call the study coordinator vs your usual team.

Trial
💉 Considering Gene Therapy / HCT

Eligibility, fertility preservation, what the conditioning weeks look like, follow-up.

Add-on
✈️ Travel & SCD

Altitude, dehydration, cold, time-zone meds, packing your Passport, finding a hospital abroad.

Add-on
🎓 At School / At Work

Sample 504 plans, ADA accommodations, cooling breaks, how to talk to teachers/HR.

Family
👨‍👩‍👧 For Caregivers & Siblings

How to feel for the spleen, what to put in the go-bag, taking care of yourself.

Custom
+ Add Your Institution's Module

Drop in your own — chemo ed, infusion-pump training, port-access teach-back, anything.

🛡️Force Field Emergency Card — fridge · wallet · EMT-ready click to expand

🛡️ Force Field Emergency Card FRIDGE · WALLET · EMT-READY

A one-page emergency record for any EMT, ER, new doctor, or transition visit. Print one for the fridge, one for your wallet. Updates anytime. This is the document you hand to a stranger when you can't speak for yourself.

🤝 My Care Team — call list for any clinician picking up my care
📘My Health Passport — visit log · questions · trackers click to expand

📘 My Health Passport PATIENT-OWNED JOURNAL

This is your record — not your hospital's. Log every visit, capture every question for next time, and watch your own trends. Many of you get care at more than one hospital, on more than one record system. This Passport travels with you. Future versions will let you import data directly from your patient portals (the "Blue Button" vision).

        Blue Button vision: A future release will let you connect your patient portals (Epic MyChart, Cerner, Athena, VA, others) and pull your labs, meds, and visit history straight in. Until then, this Passport is your single, portable record across institutions — you own it.

        🩺Working With a Prepared Patient

        Your patient is going through a structured, evidence-based course. Here's how to get the most out of every visit, reduce ER use, and partner well. Built on the AHRQ SHARE Approach, the IOM teach-back method, and the 2014 NHLBI & 2020 ASH SCD guidelines.

        The SHARE Approach — your 5-step playbook

        Use these steps in any order. Cycle back. Use teach-back at every transition. Source: AHRQ Pub. No. 25-0005 (Oct 2024).

        💬Teach-Back & Risk Communication

        The two highest-yield, lowest-cost SDM techniques. Use both at every visit.

        🔁 Teach-Back (1–2 min)
        • "Just so I know I explained it well — what would you tell your sister about why we're starting hydroxyurea?"
        • Open-ended ("what" / "how"), not yes/no.
        • If they get it wrong: "I must not have explained it well — let me try a different way." Then teach-back again.
        • Use it for: pain plan, hydroxyurea ramp-up, when to call you vs ER, fever rule, port-flush technique.
        • Document teach-back in your note — it's a quality measure and a billable element of care.
        🔢 Communicating Numbers
        • Use absolute risk, not relative. "13 out of 100" beats "13%" beats "1 in 8" beats "low risk."
        • Keep denominators & timeframes constant when comparing options.
        • Show, don't tell: icon arrays, Wong-Baker FACES, written summary.
        • For lab numbers: give the action threshold, not just the value. "Your ferritin is 1,200 — over 1,000 we usually start iron removal."

        ⚠️SCD-Specific Clinical Guardrails

        Do these every visit. Skipping them is the most common reason a Prepared Patient ends up in the ER.

        🟢 Every Visit Checklist
        • Confirm hydroxyurea dose & HbF goal; ramp to MTD if labs allow.
        • Pain plan: home opioid script, when to escalate, no NSAIDs if GFR < 60.
        • Pneumococcal, meningococcal (ACWY + B), influenza, COVID, Hib up to date.
        • Eye exam yearly (proliferative retinopathy — esp. HbSC).
        • BP and urine albumin every visit; ACE/ARB if > 30 mg/g.
        • Mental health screen (PHQ-2/9 + GAD-7); pain ≠ depression but they coexist.
        🚨 Red-Flag Triage Patients Should Know
        • Fever ≥ 101°F → assess within 1 hour (CBC, blood culture, broad-spectrum if criteria met).
        • Pain + cough/fever/low O₂ → CXR, sat, transfuse threshold, incentive spirometry.
        • Sudden focal weakness, speech, vision → stroke pathway; transfuse to HbS < 30%.
        • Priapism > 4 hours → urgent urology + IV fluids + analgesia.
        • Pediatric: spleen palpable / pale / lethargic → splenic sequestration.

        🌍Cultural Competence & Trust

        SCD disproportionately affects Black, Hispanic, Mediterranean, Middle Eastern, and South Asian communities. Many patients have been under-treated or accused of drug-seeking. Repair starts in your office.

        • Start with belief. Pain is what the patient says it is. SCD pain is real, severe, and often poorly treated.
        • Ask about their model. "What do you think causes a crisis for you? What do you think helps?" Use that language.
        • Use qualified medical interpreters — never family, never minor children except in true emergencies.
        • Invite the family in. Decisions about transition, transplant, gene therapy, fertility, pregnancy are family decisions in many cultures.
        • Name the bias. "I know SCD patients have often been doubted in ERs. We track that here, and you can tell me if it ever happens."

        🏥Customize for Your Institution

        Clone this course and replace the highlighted blocks with your own information. Each editable field below is a placeholder — change it once and it propagates through the patient view.

        📞 What Should Replace the When-to-Call Block
        • 24/7 hematology on-call number
        • Day Hospital / SCD infusion clinic hours & address
        • Specialty pharmacy line
        • Behavioral health / crisis line
        • Patient portal login URL
        👤 Who Is Your "Susan"?
        • Name, role, photo, calendly/booking link.
        • What teach-back / device check-ins they own (port flushing, infusion pump, hydroxyurea ramp).
        • How patients reach them between visits.
        📚 Add Your Own Modules
        • Your clinical trial protocols (chemo ed, gene therapy run-up).
        • Local 504 plan template, school-letter template.
        • Insurance & financial-aid pathways.
        • Local peer support partners (e.g., 360 SCD Hub, SCD Foundation Arizona).
        🎨 Re-skin in 2 Lines of CSS
        • --inst-primary: your brand color
        • Replace the FFH × 360 SCD Hub × [Your Institution] cobrand pill in the hero
        • Drop in your logo PNG (white version) — same 48px height as FFH logo

        📚 Evidence Base — what this course is built on

        Course content is educational and not a substitute for medical advice from your own clinicians. Institutions cloning this course are responsible for accuracy of all customized blocks.

        Prepared Medical Professional · SCDChapter 1 · Learn It

        1Module title

        Module description.

        Take the Pre-Check, work through Learn It → Live It → Share It, then take the Post-Check (≥4/5 to mark complete).