Pediatric emergency care
-
Pediatric emergency care · Feb 2003
Nonurgent pediatric emergency department visits: Care-seeking behavior and parental knowledge of insurance.
OBJECTIVES The goals of this study were to describe the factors associated with utilization of emergency services for nonurgent illnesses by insured children in a pediatric emergency department (PED) and to assess parental knowledge of their insurance and its influence on care-seeking behaviors. METHODS We conducted a prospective, descriptive survey of parents of insured children evaluated for nonurgent illnesses in an urban PED. RESULTS A total of 251 surveys were completed. ⋯ CONCLUSIONS Parents frequently do not understand their insurance coverage as it relates to emergency care utilization. This lack of knowledge influences their care-seeking behaviors for nonurgent illnesses. Convenience is a significant factor in PED utilization for nonurgent complaints.
-
Pediatric emergency care · Feb 2003
Training in pediatric critical care medicine: A survey of pediatric residency training programs.
After completing their critical care rotations, pediatric residents are expected to have acquired skills in the resuscitation of critically ill newborns and children. Recent Accreditation Council on Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) guidelines have limited the time devoted to critical care training during pediatric residency. We sought to determine how individual programs have structured their critical care training experience in light of these changes. ⋯ Pediatric residency programs have structured their critical care rotations in a similar fashion in accordance with ACGME guidelines. The success in meeting the stated objectives, as measured by the ability of graduating residents to stabilize critically ill children, is not known and will require further study.
-
Pediatric emergency care · Feb 2003
Case ReportsPediatric pericardial tamponade presenting as altered mental status.
The purpose of this case report is to illustrate the diagnostic difficulties of pericardial tamponade and to suggest that focused cardiac ultrasound be included in the resuscitative care of pediatric shock. Three cases of cardiac tamponade are presented. ⋯ Hypotension was not responsive to intravenous volume expansion treatment. Diagnostic delays would have been prevented if focused cardiac ultrasound had been included in the resuscitative care of shock.
-
Pediatric emergency care · Feb 2003
Pediatric emergency medicine fellowship training in the new millennium.
OBJECTIVE Fellowship training in pediatric emergency medicine has been available since the early 1980s. Its availability increased rapidly in the late 1980s and early 1990s, but its growth has been much slower in recent years. In this report, we characterize and compare the training programs of today to those that existed 10 years ago. ⋯ CONCLUSIONS Pediatric emergency medicine continues to expand as a pediatric subspecialty but at a slower rate. During the previous decade, fellowship training has become more structured, with greater emphasis being placed on fellow supervision, standardization of education, and research. These data are meant to assist new as well as established fellowship programs with the development of their training curriculum.