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Pediatr Crit Care Me · Feb 2021
Feasibility of Family-Assisted Severity of Illness Monitoring for Hospitalized Children in Low-Income Settings.
- Amelie O von Saint Andre-von Arnim, Rashmi K Kumar, Assaf P Oron, Quynh-Uyen P Nguyen, Daniel M Mutonga, Jerry Zimmerman, and Judd L Walson.
- Division of Pediatric Critical Care, Department of Pediatrics, Seattle Children's, University of Washington, Seattle, WA.
- Pediatr Crit Care Me. 2021 Feb 1; 22 (2): e115e124e115-e124.
ObjectivesTo determine the feasibility of having caregivers assist in recognition of clinical deterioration in children hospitalized with febrile illness in a resource-limited setting.DesignSingle-center, prospective, interventional pilot study.SettingGeneral pediatric wards at Kenyatta National Hospital, Nairobi, Kenya's largest public tertiary-care hospital.PatientsChildren hospitalized with acute febrile illness, accompanied by caregivers available at the bedside for 24 hours soon after hospital admission.InterventionsCaregivers were trained to recognize signs of critical illness using the Family-Assisted Severe Febrile Illness Therapy tool, which quantifies patients' work of breathing, mental status, and perfusion, producing color-coded flags to signal illness severity. Caregivers' Family-Assisted Severe Febrile Illness Therapy assessments were compared with healthcare professional assessments and to established Pediatric Early Warning Scores (PEWS). An initial study stage was followed by refinement of training and a larger second stage with intervention/control arms.Measurements And Main ResultsA total of 107 patient/caregiver pairs were enrolled in the interventional arm; 106 caregivers underwent Family-Assisted Severe Febrile Illness Therapy training and were included in the analysis. Patient characteristics included median age 1.1 years (0.2-10 yr), 55 (52%) female, and diagnoses: pneumonia (64 [60%]), meningitis (38 [36%]), gastroenteritis (24 [23%]), and malaria (21 [20%]). Most caregivers had primary (34 [32%]) or secondary (53 [50%]) school education. Fourteen of 106 patients (13%) died during their stay, six within 2 days. Across all severity levels, caregiver Family-Assisted Severe Febrile Illness Therapy assessments matched professionals in 87% and 94% for stages 1 and 2, respectively. Caregiver Family-Assisted Severe Febrile Illness Therapy assessments had a moderate to strong correlation with coinciding Pediatric Early Warning Scores and were sensitive to life-threatening deterioration: for all six patients who died within 2 days of admission, caregiver assessment reached the highest alert level.ConclusionsCaregiver involvement in recognition of critical illness in hospitalized children in low-resource settings may be feasible. This may facilitate earlier detection of clinical deterioration where staffing is severely limited by constrained resources. Further validation of the Family-Assisted Severe Febrile Illness Therapy tool is warranted, followed by its application in a larger multisite patient population to assess provider response and associated clinical outcomes.Copyright © 2020 by the Society of Critical Care Medicine and the World Federation of Pediatric Intensive and Critical Care Societies.
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