Pediatric emergency care
-
Pediatric emergency care · Jun 1993
Pediatric education in emergency medicine residency programs--10 years later.
The purpose of this study is to examine the changes in the pediatric emergency medicine education of emergency medicine (EM) residents over the last decade. Questionnaires were mailed to the training directors of all EM residency programs. Sixty-five programs (79%) responded. ⋯ Most physicians in charge of pediatric emergency medicine education are emergency medicine trained (75% vs 29% in 1981), and only 12% are pediatric emergency medicine fellowship trained. Despite several improvements and the increased satisfaction of program directors, the pediatric component of EM residents' training continues to be disproportionate to the number of children in the emergency medicine patient population. Specialists in pediatric emergency medicine should strive to play a more significant role in the pediatric education of EM residents.
-
Pediatric emergency care · Jun 1993
General trauma in a pediatric emergency department: spectrum and consultation patterns.
To assess the consultation patterns of pediatric emergency physicians in the management of injured children and to describe the spectrum of pediatric trauma, we retrospectively reviewed 601 patients treated in the emergency department for injuries during four one-week periods at a designated level I regional pediatric trauma center (50,000 patients/year) with a pediatric emergency medicine fellowship. The majority (94%) of pediatric trauma was minor; only 2% of children had injuries severe enough to require direct transfer to the operating room. The highest volume of patients, the greatest number of consultations, and the majority of admissions to the operating room occurred between 4 PM and midnight. ⋯ One half of all procedures involved laceration repair, and one third involved splinting or casting. Four hundred ten patients (68%) were managed by physicians in the emergency department without consultation. The orthopedic service performed one half of all consultations and admitted the largest number of patients; the majority of patients taken directly to the operating room had musculoskeletal injuries.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)